Advance Directives: Questions and Answers
Q. What are "Advance
Directives"?
A. Advance directives are documents that state your choices
about medical treatment or name someone to make decisions about
your medical treatment, if you are unable to make these decisions
or choices yourself. They are called "advance" directives because
they are signed in advance to let your doctor and other healthcare
providers know your wishes concerning medical treatment. Through
advance directives, you can make legally valid decisions about
your future medical care.
North Carolina law recognizes three
types of advance directives:
- A Declaration (Living
Will)
- A Healthcare Power of
Attorney
- An Advance Instruction for
Mental Health Treatment
Q. Do I have to have an
Advance Directive?
A. No, it is entirely up to you whether you want to prepare
any documents. But if questions arise about the kind of medical
treatment that you want or do not want, advance directives may
help to solve these important issues. Your doctor or any
healthcare provider cannot require you to have an advance
directive in order to receive care; nor can they prohibit you from
having an advance directive. Moreover, under North Carolina law,
no healthcare provider or insurer can charge a different fee or
rate depending on whether or not you have executed an advance
directive.
Q. What will happen if I do
not make an Advance Directive?
A. If you cannot speak for yourself and have not made an
advance directive, you doctor or other healthcare providers will
generally look to your family or friends for decisions about your
care. But if your doctor or your healthcare facility is unsure or
if your family members cannot agree, they may have to ask the
court to appoint a person (called a guardian) to make those
decisions for you.
Q. How do I know what
treatment I want?
A. Your doctor must inform you about your medical condition
and what different treatments can do for you. Many treatments have
serious side effects. Your doctor must give you information, in
language that you can understand, about serious problems that
medical treatment is likely to cause. Often, more than one
treatment might help you, and different people might have
different ideas on which is best. Your doctor can tell you the
treatments that are available to you, but he cannot choose for
you. That choice depends on what is important to you.
Q. Whom should I talk to
about Advance Directives?
A. Before writing down your instructions, you should talk
to those people closest to you and who are concerned about your
care and feelings. Discuss them with your family, your doctor,
friends and other appropriate people, such as a member of your
clergy or your lawyer. These people who will be involved with your
healthcare if your are unable to make your own decisions.
Q. When do Advance
Directives go into effect?
A. It is important to remember that these directives only
take effect when you can longer make your own healthcare
decisions. As long as you are able to give "informed consent,"
your healthcare providers will rely on you and not on your advance
directives.
Q. What is "Informed
Consent"?
A. Informed consent means that you are able to understand
the nature, extent and probable consequences of proposed medical
treatments, you are able to make rational evaluations of the risks
and benefits of those treatments as compared with the risks and
benefits of alternate procedures, and you are able to communicate
that understanding in any way.
Q. How will healthcare
providers know if I have any Advance Directives?
A. All hospitals, nursing homes, home health agencies, HMOs
and all other healthcare facilities that accept federal funds must
ask if you have an advance directive, and if so, they must see
that it is made part of your medical records.
Q. Will my Advance
Directives be followed?
A. Generally, yes, if they comply with North Carolina law.
Federal law requires your healthcare providers to give you their
written policies concerning advance directives. A summary
statement of those policies is provided for you at the back of
this book. It may happen that your doctor or other healthcare
provider cannot or will not follow your advance directives for
moral, religious or professional reasons, even though they comply
with North Carolina law. If this happens, they must immediately
tell you. Then they must also help you transfer to another doctor
or facility that will do what you want
Q. Can I change my mind
after I write an Advance Directive?
A. Yes, at any time, you can cancel or change any advance
directive that you have written. To cancel your directive, simply
destroy the original document and tell your family, friends,
doctor and anyone else who has copies that you have cancelled
them. To change your advance directives, simply write and date a
new one. Again, give copies of your revised documents to all the
appropriate parties, including your doctor.
Q. Do I need a lawyer to
help me make an Advance Directive?
A. A lawyer may be helpful and you might choose to discuss
these matters with him, but there is no legal requirement in North
Carolina to do so. You may use the forms that are provided in this
booklet to execute your advance directives.
Q. Will my North Carolina
Advance Directive be honored in another state?
A. The laws on advance directives differ from state to
state, so it is unclear whether a North Carolina advance directive
will be valid in another state. Because an advance directive is a
clear expression of your wishes about medical care, it will
influence that care no matter where you are admitted. However, if
you plan to spend a great deal of time in another state, you might
want to consider signing an advance directive that meets all the
legal requirements of that state.
Q. Will Advance Directives
from other states be valid in North Carolina?
A. An advance directive executed in another state may not
meet all the requirements of North Carolina law. To make sure you
have a legal advance directive, you should execute North Carolina
forms or have your attorney review the advance directive from the
other state.
Q. What should I do with my
Advance Directives?
A. You should keep them in a safe place where your family
members can get to them. Do not keep the original copies in your
safe deposit box. Give copies of these documents to as many of the
following people as you are comfortable with: your spouse and
other family members; your doctor; your lawyer; your clergyperson;
and any local hospital or nursing home where you may be residing.
Another idea is to keep a small wallet card in your purse or
wallet that states that you have an advance directive, and who
should be contacted.
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