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Specializing in Elder Law
Florida Bar Board Certified
410 South Lincoln Avenue | Clearwater, Florida 33756-5826
Phone: 727.441.4516 |  E-mail:
ElderLaw@Charlie-Robinson.com

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End of Life Decisions

THIS IS YOUR LIFE!  End of life decisions can be yours also with advance directives. Make sure your documents reflect your values regarding end of life care.  You would not want to leave your quality of care to chance. It is vital to put your wishes in writing now while you are able to clearly express them. Your Health Care Surrogate Designation gives instructions about your health care if, in the future, you cannot speak for yourself. It also enables you to give someone the power to make health care decisions for you. A Living Will generally states your wishes about life-sustaining medical treatments if you are terminally ill, in a persistent vegetative state or an end stage condition as defined below.

A terminal condition, defined in Florida Statute 765.101 (17), is “a condition caused by injury, disease, or illness from which there is no reasonable medical probability of recovery and which, without treatment, can be expected to cause death.”

A persistent vegetative state, defined in Florida Statute 765.101 (12 a, b) is “a permanent and irreversible condition of unconsciousness in which there is: (a) the absence of voluntary action or cognitive behavior of any kind, (b) an inability to communicate or interact purposefully with the environment.”

An end-stage condition, defined in Florida Statute 765.101 (4), is “an irreversible condition that is caused by injury, disease, or illness which has resulted in progressively severe and permanent deterioration, and for which, to a reasonable degree of medical probability, treatment of the irreversible condition would be ineffective.”

Section 765.104 of the Florida Statutes now allows amendment of advance directives in addition to revocation. The amendment or revocation is effective when communicated to the surrogate, health care provider or health care facility and can be accomplished in four ways: (1) by means of a signed, dated writing; (2) by physically destroying the advance directive or directing another person to destroy the original document; (3) by orally expressing intent to amend or revoke; or (4) by signing a new advance directive materially different from the old one. A health care facility cannot make the patient sign the facility's advance directives form. The advance directives must travel with the patient's chart. .  If you have documents that reflect your wishes, do not let the nursing home, hospital, or any other health care provider talk you into signing new documents.

Advance directives are more important than ever. Since 1990, Florida law has provided for a person to act as a "proxy" if the patient did not have advance directives in place. The proxy is chosen from a list that starts with legal guardian, then spouse and family members all the way to close personal friend. There has been a gap in coverage when there is no one to serve as proxy. New statute section 765.404 is created to deal with the no family, no friends situation for persistent vegetative state cases only. The patient must have a judicially appointed guardian with authority to consent to medical treatment. The guardian and the patient's attending physician, in consultation with the medical ethics committee for the patient's facility, must conclude that the condition is permanent with no reasonable hope for recovery and that withholding or withdrawing life prolonging procedures is in the patient's best interests. If the facility has no ethics committee, it must make an arrangement with another facility to use their ethics committee or a community-based ethics committee approved by the Florida Bio-Ethics Network. An inherent danger is that analysis may focus on cost versus benefit, playing into the hands of the entity paying for care, whether that entity is Medicaid or private insurance.

 

 

 

 

Floridia Board Certied Elder Law

NAELA

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