Advanced Directives and Power of Attorney

 
An oral or written instruction under the
Texas Advance Directives Act to
administer, withhold or withdraw life-
sustaining treatments in the event of a
terminal or irreversible condition.
 
An incurable condition caused by injury,
disease or illness that according to
reasonable medical judgment will
produce death within 6 months, even
with available life-sustaining treatment
provided in accordance with the
prevailing standard of medical care.
 
A condition, injury or illness that may be
treated but is never cured or eliminated;
that leaves a person unable to care for
themselves or make decisions on their
own behalf; and that, without life-
sustaining treatment provided in
accordance with the prevailing
standard of medical care.
 
Treatment that, based on reasonable
medical judgment sustains the life of a
patient and without which the patient
will die. This includes both life-sustaining
medications and artificial life support.
This term does not include the
administration of pain management
medication, the performance of a
medical procedure considered to be
necessary to provide comfort care or
any other medical care provided to
alleviate a patient's pain.
 
A document delegating to an agent the
authority to make health care decisions
on behalf of a principal executed or
issued under the Advanced Directives
Act.
 
On the nursing units in the resources boxes
 
On the intranet under the Depts. tab and
then the UOM link
 
Ask a social worker for them
 
**If you are at Midland Memorial Hospital
please contact social services for these
documents at  ext. 5214.
 
Patients must be competent and able to
make informed decisions in order to
execute these documents.
Two people must witness the signing of
these documents.
Witnesses cannot be providing direct
patient care and cannot be the physician
or an employee of the physician treating
the patient.
Witnesses cannot be the appointed agent,
a relative of the patient, or a beneficiary of
the patient’s estate
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Advanced directives and power of attorney are legal documents that allow individuals to plan for their medical care in case they become incapacitated. Advanced directives include instructions about life-sustaining treatments in terminal or irreversible conditions, while power of attorney delegates decision-making authority to an agent. These documents are important for ensuring your healthcare preferences are followed when you are unable to communicate them yourself.

  • Advanced Directives
  • Power of Attorney
  • Medical Care Planning
  • End-of-Life Decisions
  • Healthcare Directives

Uploaded on Sep 21, 2024 | 0 Views


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  1. Advanced Directives & Power of Attorney

  2. Advanced Directive An oral or written instruction under the Texas Advance Directives Act to administer, withhold or withdraw life- sustaining treatments in the event of a terminal or irreversible condition.

  3. What is a Terminal Condition? An incurable condition caused by injury, disease or illness that according to reasonable medical judgment will produce death within 6 months, even with available life-sustaining treatment provided in accordance with the prevailing standard of medical care.

  4. What is an Irreversible Condition? A condition, injury or illness that may be treated but is never cured or eliminated; that leaves a person unable to care for themselves or make decisions on their own behalf; and that, without life- sustaining treatment provided in accordance with the prevailing standard of medical care.

  5. What is Life-Sustaining Treatment? Treatment that, based on reasonable medical judgment sustains the life of a patient and without which the patient will die. This includes both life-sustaining medications and artificial life support. This term does not include the administration of pain management medication, the performance of a medical procedure considered to be necessary to provide comfort care or any other medical care provided to alleviate a patient's pain.

  6. Power of Attorney A document delegating to an agent the authority to make health care decisions on behalf of a principal executed or issued under the Advanced Directives Act.

  7. Where are these Documents Located? On the nursing units in the resources boxes On the intranet under the Depts. tab and then the UOM link Ask a social worker for them **If you are at Midland Memorial Hospital please contact social services for these documents at ext. 5214.

  8. Completing these Documents? Patients must be competent and able to make informed decisions in order to execute these documents. Two people must witness the signing of these documents. Witnesses cannot be providing direct patient care and cannot be the physician or an employee of the physician treating the patient. Witnesses cannot be the appointed agent, a relative of the patient, or a beneficiary of the patient s estate

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