Elder Law, Probate Attorney and Estate Planning Lawyer in Palm Coast and Flagler County, Florida

The Coleman Elder Law and Estate Planning Center
Elder Law - Medicaid Planning - Estate Planning - Wills - Trusts - Probate- Power of Attorney
Let Our 30+ Years of Experience Help You Achieve Peace of Mind!
 10161 Centurion Parkway N., Suite 310
Jacksonville, Florida 32256
(904) 448-1969

Advance Directives, Florida Designation of Health Care Surrogate (Power of Attorney for Health Care)
Advance Directives - Living Wills and Health Care Surrogate Designations
LIVING WILLS AND HEALTH CARE ADVANCE DIRECTIVES: FAQs

The Florida Legislature has recognized that every competent adult has the fundamental right of self-determination regarding decisions pertaining to his or her own health, including the right to choose or refuse medical treatment or procedures which would only prolong life when a terminal condition exists.

This right, however, is subject to certain interests of society, such as the protection of human life and the preservation of ethical standards in the medical profession. To ensure that this right is not lost or diminished by virtue of later physical or mental incapacity, the Legislature has established a procedure within
Florida Statutes Chapter 765 allowing a person to plan for incapacity, and if desired, to designate another person to act on his or her behalf and make necessary medical decisions upon such incapacity. Your Jacksonville estate planning lawyer or elder law attorney can answer your questions about advance directives, living wills, designations of health care surrogates or health care powers of attorney.

What Are Advance Directives?


For more Video Answers to Elder Law FAQs - go here.

If you need assistance with advance directives, including a medical durable power of attorney, a designation of health care surrogate, or a living will, please contact your Jacksonville elder law attorney for advance directives by calling us at (904) 448-1969, or toll free at 866-510-9099, or email your Jacksonville elder law attorney and estate planning lawyer at Info@ColemanElderLaw.com.

Why should I consider a long term care plan in Florida?


For more information on estate planning and asset protection read The Florida Asset Protection and Estate Planning Blog.

 
1. What is a Living Will?

2. What is the difference between a Living Will and a legal will?

3. How do I make my Living Will effective?

4. After I sign a Living Will, what is next?

5. What is a Health Care Surrogate?

6. How do I designate a Health Care Surrogate?

7. Can I have more than one Health Care Surrogate?

8. Can the Living Will and the Health Care Surrogate designation be revoked?

9. Where can I go to obtain legal advice on this issue?



1. What is a Living Will?
 

Every competent adult has the right to make a written declaration commonly known as a "Living Will." The purpose of this document is to direct the provision, the withholding or withdrawal of life prolonging procedures in the event one should have a terminal condition. The suggested legal form for this instrument has been provided by the Legislature within Florida Statutes, Section 765.303. In Florida, the definition of "life prolonging procedures" has been expanded by the Florida Legislature to include the provision of food and water to terminally ill patients. One is not restricted to the use of the legal form provided by statute, but can expand or limit the coverage of the statutory legal forms. An experienced Palm Coast estate planning attorney or elder law attorney can assist you in preparing an advance directive that is broader or more narrow than the Florida statutorily provided legal forms. If we can assist you, please call us at (904) 448-1969 or email us at Info@ColemanElderLaw.com. (Back to Top of Page)

2. What is the difference between a Living Will and a legal will? 

A Living Will should not be confused with a person’s legal will (commonly referred to as a Last Will and Testament), which disposes of personal property on or after his or her death, and appoints a personal representative or revokes or revises another will and is usually drafted by a Florida wills lawyer. Your Jacksonville and Ponte Vedra Beach estate planning lawyer or elder law attorney can assist you with the preparation of either your living will or a legal will. (Back to Top of Page)

3. How do I make my Living Will effective? 

Under Florida law, a Living Will must be signed by its maker in the presence of two witnesses, at least one of whom is neither the spouse nor a blood relative of the maker. If the maker is physically unable to sign the Living Will, one of the witnesses can sign in the presence and at the direction of the maker. Florida will recognize a Living Will, which has been signed in another state, if that Living Will was signed in compliance with the laws of that state, or in compliance with the laws of Florida. (Back to Top of Page)

4. After I sign a Living Will, what is next? 

Once a Living Will has been signed, it is the maker's responsibility to provide notification to the physician of its existence. It is a good idea to provide a copy of the Living Will to the maker's physician and hospital, to be placed within the medical records. The Jacksonville Elder Law and Estate Planning Center, since 2002, maintains an electronic file containing all of its clients' advance directives, including the living will, and can provide those douments via fax or email at anytime during normal working hours. There are a number of national services that provide for the electronic storage of your living will and other advance directives, usually for a small fee. These services will provide copies of your living will, or other advance directives 24 hours a day, seven days a week, by fax, email, or regular mail. Among the companies providing such services are: DocuBank, the National Register of Living Wills, and the U.S Living Will Registry. Many individual State governments have also established a living will registry designed for residents of the State. Some lawyers provide storage for advance directives they have prepared for their clients. The Coleman Law Firm maintains client records, including advance directives that can be obtained upon request by either email or facsimile transmission, as well as the US Postal Service. (Back to Top of Page)

5. What is a Health Care Surrogate? 

Any competent adult may also designate authority to a Health Care Surrogate to make all health care decisions during any period of incapacity, or if you are otherwise unable to communicate with your health care provider. During the maker's incapacity, the Health Care Surrogate has the duty to consult expeditiously, with appropriate health care providers. The Surrogate also provides informed consent and makes only health care decisions for the maker, which he or she believes the maker would have made under the circumstances if the maker were capable of making such decisions. If there is no indication of what the maker would have chosen, the Surrogate may consider the maker's best interest in deciding on a course of treatment. The suggested legal form for this instrument has been provided by the Legislature within Florida Statutes Section 765.203. If you need additional information, please contact your Jacksonville elder law attorney or estate planning lawyer at the Jacksonville Elder Law and Estate Planning Center at (904) 448-1969, toll free at 866-510-9099 or by email at Info@ColemanElderLaw.com. (Back to Top of Page)

6. How do I designate a Health Care Surrogate? 

Under Florida law, designation of a Health Care Surrogate should be made through a written legal form document, and should be signed in the presence of two witnesses, at least one of whom is neither the spouse nor a blood relative of the maker. The person designated as Surrogate cannot act as a witness to the signing of the document. (Back to Top of Page)

7. Can I have more than one Health Care Surrogate? 

The advance directive maker can also explicitly designate an Alternate Health Care Surrogate. The Alternate Health Care Surrogate may assume the duties as Surrogate if the original health care Surrogate is unwilling or unable to perform his or her duties.

If the advance directive maker is physically unable to sign the designation of health care surrogate, he or she may, in the presence of witnesses, direct that another person sign the document. An exact copy of the designation must be provided to the Health Care Surrogate. Unless the designation states a time of termination, the designation of health care surrogate will remain in effect until revoked by its maker. You can also name two or more people to act as your Surrogate, providing each of them the authority to make decisions independently of any other health care Surrogate you have named. This option allows the health care provider to proceed with appropriate treatment upon initiating contact with whichever individual the physician is first able to reach, avoiding potential delays in treatment. (Back to Top of Page)

8. Can the Living Will and the Health Care Surrogate designation be revoked? 

Both the Living Will and the Designation of Health Care Surrogate may be revoked by the maker at any time by a signed and dated letter of revocation; by physically canceling or destroying the original document; by an oral expression of one's intent to revoke; or by means of a later executed document which is materially different from the former document. It is very important to tell your attending physician that your Living Will or Designation of Health Care Surrogate have been revoked. (Back to Top of Page)

9. Where can I go to obtain legal advice on this issue? 

Do all attorneys practice elder law?

If you need legal advice regarding advance directives for health care, either a living will or a designation of health care surrogate, please call your Jacksonville Elder Law Attorney or your Northeast Florida estate planning lawyer for advance directives, the estate planning lawyer and elder law attorney at the Coleman Elder Law and Estate Planning Center, toll free, at 866-510-9099, or email us at info@ColemanElderLaw.com. (Back to Top of Page)

Website Builder