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Living Wills & Health Proxies. Living Wills, Health Proxies: Vital Documents for Everyone Tips for Chronic Illness and RV’ers. By: Martin M. Shenkman, CPA, MBA, PFS, AEP, JD. Caveats.
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Living Wills & Health Proxies Living Wills, Health Proxies: Vital Documents for Everyone Tips for Chronic Illness and RV’ers By: Martin M. Shenkman, CPA, MBA, PFS, AEP, JD
Caveats Nothing in these slides or any accompanying presentation is to be considered tax, legal, investment or other professional advice. The information is merely provided for educational purposes and no action should be taken without the individual consulting his or her own tax, estate, legal, financial, investment, insurance and other advisers. The hosts and sponsors of this program are NOT responsible for its content or accuracy
Overview of Living Wills, Health Care Proxies and HIPAA Releases • Definitions and basic planning
Designate a Person to Make Health Care Decisions and Access Medical Records • Agent (successors) • Powers (religion) • Signature (State law) • Move (state; facility) Health Care Proxy Medical Power of Attorney
What is a Health Care Proxy? • A legal document in which you authorize someone to make health care decisions for you if you are not able to do so • It can address a broad range of related issues: burial, last rights, hospice care and more • It is not only about “pulling the plug”
Step 4: Communicating Your Health Care Wishes Prepare a Living Will
What is a Living Will? • A living will is a legal document in which you make statements as to your health care wishes • Not binding in all states but can be an important tool to communicate your wishes to your agent and loved ones • Address religious and other personal health care and end of life decisions • What do you want for palliative care, hospice, companion care and other decisions
Step 4: Authorize Access to Your Private Health Information Prepare a HIPAA Release
What is a HIPAA Release? • A legal document in which you authorize a person, called your HIPAA Representative, to have access to certain medical information (your PHI or Private Health Information) • This can be a help when you want someone to monitor your care and interact with medical personal but you are not at a point where you have to turn over medical decision making authority • This can be very important for someone living with a chronic illness that might have an attack or unexpected hospitalization and wish help but not to abrogate decision making (COPD, MS, Crohn’s)
Who Should you Name as Agent for Medical Matters? • Usually you would name the same person as Agent in your living will, health proxy and HIPAA release, but not always • Does the person have the emotional temperament to deal with the potentially tough decisions • If you have an existing health condition does the person understand how it affects you • Is the person’s religious perspective similar to yours • Will the person you name interact well with other loved ones • Name only one person at a time
What Authority Should You Give Your Medical Agents? • Interact with medical professionals • Make medical decisions if you cannot that are consistent with your wishes • Hire companion and other care • Make hospice and related arrangements • Purchase a burial plot or make other funeral and related arrangements
What Authority Might You NOT Give Your Medical Agents? • To make decisions if you are capable of doing so • Violate your wishes as set forth in your documents
Merely Signing a Legal Form Alone is Never Enough ? • Your agent must know what is expected and have a real understanding of your wishes • Key information must be accessible – health insurance details, names and contact information on medical providers and more • A copy of your legal documents should be made a part of your patient records
RV’er Tips for Living Wills • Which state law should apply to your health proxy • Where should you sign your living will and health proxy • Consider taking a thumb drive with PDFs of your health proxy, living will and HIPAA release and medical records • Can you use a format that is more likely to be accepted in other states (e.g., 2 witnesses and a notary)
Living Wills and Your Other Legal Documents • Keeping the confusing names of legal documents clear
Overview of Estate Planning Documents and How they Relate to Your Health Proxy Power of Attorney Agent to handle finances Springing vs. not – may involve medical considerations Special provisions to include – e.g. having your agent pay for your health proxies medical decisions Living Wills State your health care wishes Address specific health issues Religious issues • Health Proxies/HIPAA Releases • Agent to make medical decisions based on living will • Selecting agent • What powers to include • Revocable Living Trusts • Unique importance to those with health issues • Boilerplate forms rarely address nuances needed for chronic illness • Relationship to other documents
Medical Documents – Making it Practical For Your Agents to Act • You need more than just a legal form
Organize Information So Your Agent Can Act • Agent (names, numbers) • Physicians (names, numbers specialty) • Insurance info • Selected health info
Organizing Emergency Info #1 • People forget and panic. Don’t put off creating an emergency list • Type up a list on your computer so you can update it • Disseminate the list to key people, ask for their help and tell them what they might need to do to help • Your estate planning attorney should have a copy of each document in their file
Organizing Emergency Info #2 • Organize the list by category (e.g., general physicians, specialists, religious advisers, family/loved ones) • Give only the key facts someone will need to act in an emergency (name and contact info, medical institution, insurance company and policy info, office/home and cell number, email, etc.) • List info needed for emergency action (e.g., account number, policy number, etc.)
RV TIP: Organize Emergency Information • Rv’ers, or anyone who travels extensively, should take extra precautions to make sure information is available when needed • Carry an extra set of originals with you • Consider a web based personal information “locker” and give a trusted person the info • Email updated emergency info list to key people whenever there are major changes
Medical Decision Making – Communication is Key • You need to discuss your plan
Communicate with Your Agent and Loved Ones • Educate and inform your loved ones and agent about your wishes, what they may need to do to help, where they’ll find info they need Having a real conversation is one of the most important steps you can take
Communication Tips • Explain your health care concerns, family issues, personal wishes, religious considerations, and so forth to your agents and loved ones (don’t assume they know!) – tell all so they can help properly • Discuss with family, friends or others involved in your life what your wishes are • Can those you expect to rely on really help? Have alternatives • Express your wishes in face to face meetings and then confirm key points in writing
Living Wills and Health Proxies – A Process not a Single Act • Don’t sign it and forget it!
Review, Revisit, Revise • Nothing remains static • Family situations • Health • Comfort with Agent • Where you live
Living Wills – What’s Next? • Understanding medical decision making is not enough – Take action
Make an Action Plan And Get Started
Action Steps: Your Action Plan √ Write it down or it won’t happen √ Set small goals – make decisions, hire a lawyer, gather information – even devoting an hour a week or month will get you there √ Tell others – including advisers √ Get help and guidance to get started – an initial consultation with a physician or other health care adviser can jump start the entire process
Summary: Living Wills; Health Proxies and HIPAA Releases • Choose an appropriate agent and several successors • Hire a lawyer to draft documents that work for your personal medical, family and religious situation • Discuss modifications to standard forms: • Existing health issues • Religious beliefs (or an indication that you don’t want religious restrictions) • Sign then distribute originals and/or copies • Update as your medical situation evolves or feelings change
Protect yourself and your loved ones