Steps to Creating a Living Will
Years ago, a controversy ensued in the medical community regarding a
39-year-old woman’s right to die. Have you heard about the Terri
Schiavo case before? Schiavo had been on life support for over nine
years since a heart attack prevented oxygen from entering her brain.
That was fatal indeed. But the dilemma was that she would have wanted
to stop her life support, but her family wanted her to continue
fighting for her life.
The case, which gained national attention, taught people about the
patients’ right to decide for his or her medical treatment. The
patient’s decision about medical care is best expressed in a document
called the living will or advance directive. Creating such a document
saves a patient’s family from the emotional troubles due to dilemmas
like that faced by Schiavo’s loved ones.
If you want to lay out your wishes for medical care should you become
unable to express them in the future, you may want to consider putting
them down in writing. Most people over the age of 60 opt to create
living wills, while only 30 percent of the young ones have written
theirs. Experts recommend, though, that people beyond age 18 make their
own living wills. The following are five steps in creating an advance
directive.
1. Explore your options. The document you are going to write enables
you to make your own decision—not your doctor or your relatives—about
how long the doctors can keep you alive if you become mentally
incapacitated. Thus, you need to carefully weigh your options according
to your present and future situation.
2. Choose a family member or a friend who can be unwavering in pushing
for your wishes and for the implementation of your advance directive.
You may opt to pick a secondary advocate such as a health care
professional should your primary choice becomes unable to perform his
duty as an advocate of your medical care wishes.
3. Make your choices clear and foolproof. You can consult your family
and friends about the kind of medical treatment that you will choose or
refuse. For example, you can include in your document a resuscitation
ban, which orders a doctor not to begin procedures to help you breathe
again. You can also decide the kind of life support system you would
like to have such as feeding tubes and dialysis.
4. Write down your will. You can ask a lawyer to draft the will for
you. Every state has different laws regarding living wills, so it pays
to consult a lawyer before you create one. If you want to save on cost,
you can write the document yourself with the help of samples that you
can find over the Internet. Likewise, you can download a free copy of a
sample will online.
5. Update the document from time to time. Review it at least once a
year and make revisions to your living will, if necessary. Changes in
your situation can prompt you to change the kind of treatments you
would want to receive or refuse—make sure that these changes are
included in your will. Also, do not forget to send copies of your will
to your doctor and family member.
Articles
Living Will: An
Overview
What is a Living Will?
What is
the Purpose of a Living Will?
Selecting
your Health Care Proxies in Living Wills
When is a
Living Will Effective?
What
is the Difference Between a Living Will and Durable Power of Attorney?
Difference
between a Living Will, a Will, and a Living Trust
Tips for Living
Will Creation
The
Benefits of Using a Living Will Software
The
Benefits Of A Living Will: A Rundown
Living
Will Forms: How To Deal With Them
Frequently
Asked Questions about Living Will
Contents Of A
Living Will
Specific
Medical Treatments Involved in Living Will
Living
Will: Planning for End-of-Life Issues
What
People Should Know About Living Will
Guidelines
In Making A Living Will
The
Fundamentals Of A Living Will
More Than Just a
Living Will
Differences
of a Living Will and Trust
Advance
Medical Directives: The Living Will
How to
Create Your Own Living Will
Organ
Donation on Your Living Will
A Living Will?
Disclosure:
Owners of this website will receive compensation for
products purchased through featured advertisements.
|
style="border: medium none ;" frameborder="0" height="600"
|