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Plan My Proxy

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Georgia Advance Directive for Health Care Form

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Your Information

This advance directive for health care has four parts:

 

PART ONE—Health Care Proxy. 

This part allows you to choose someone to make health care decisions for you when you cannot (or do not want to) make health care decisions for yourself. The person you choose is called a health care agent. You may also have your health care agent make decisions for you after your death with respect to an autopsy, organ donation, body donation, and final disposition of your body. You should talk to your health care agent about this important role.

PART TWO—Treatment Preferences. 

This part allows you to state your treatment preferences if you have a terminal condition or if you are in a state of permanent unconsciousness. PART TWO will become effective only if you are unable to communicate your treatment preferences. Reasonable and appropriate efforts will be made to communicate with you about your treatment preferences before PART TWO becomes effective. You should talk to your family and others close to you about your treatment preferences.

PART THREE—Guardianship. 

This part allows you to nominate a person to be your guardian should one ever be needed.

PART FOUR—Effectiveness and Signatures. 

This part requires your signature and the signatures of two witnesses. You must complete PART FOUR if you have filled out any other part of this form.

PART ONE - Health Care Proxy

PART ONE will be effective even if PART TWO is not completed. A physician or health care provider who is directly involved in your health care may not serve as your health care agent. If you are married, a future divorce or annulment of your marriage will revoke the selection of your current spouse as your health care agent. If you are not married, a future marriage will revoke the selection of your health care agent unless the person you selected as your health care agent is your new spouse.

1. Health Care Proxy Information

I select the following person as my health care agent to make health care decisions for me:

The below section is optional but we recommend everyone to identify at least one backup proxy.

PART ONE will be effective even if this section is left blank.

Do you want to identify backup proxies?

2. Back-Up Health Care Proxy

If my health care agent cannot be contacted in a reasonable time period and cannot be located with reasonable efforts or for any reason my health care agent is unavailable or unable or unwilling to act as my health care agent, then I select the following, each to act successively in the order named, as my back-up health care agent(s):

Identify your second back-up proxy below.

In the event that your primary proxy and your proxy back-up are unable or unwilling to serve as your proxy, your second back-up proxy will take their place.

3. General Powers of Health Care Agent

My health care agent will make health care decisions for me when I am unable to communicate my health care decisions or I choose to have my health care agent communicate my health care decisions.

My health care agent will have the same authority to make any health care decision that I could make. My health care agent's authority includes, for example, the power to:

  • Admit me to or discharge me from any hospital, skilled nursing facility, hospice, or other health care facility or service;
  • Request, consent to, withhold, or withdraw any type of health care; and
  • Contract for any health care facility or service for me, and to obligate me to pay for these services (and my health care agent will not be financially liable for any services or care contracted for me or on my behalf).

My health care agent will be my personal representative for all purposes of federal or state law related to privacy of medical records (including the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996) and will have the same access to my medical records that I have and can disclose the contents of my medical records to others for my ongoing health care.

My health care agent may accompany me in an ambulance or air ambulance if in the opinion of the ambulance personnel protocol permits a passenger and my health care agent may visit or consult with me in person while I am in a hospital, skilled nursing facility, hospice, or other health care facility or service if its protocol permits visitation.

My health care agent may present a copy of this advance directive for health care in lieu of the original and the copy will have the same meaning and effect as the original.​

I understand that under Georgia law:

  • My health care agent may refuse to act as my health care agent;

  • A court can take away the powers of my health care agent if it finds that my health care agent is not acting properly; and

  • My health care agent does not have the power to make health care decisions for me regarding psychosurgery, sterilization, or treatment or involuntary hospitalization for mental or emotional illness, mental retardation, or addictive disease.

4. Guidance for Health Care Agent

When making health care decisions for me, my health care agent should think about what action would be consistent with past conversations we have had, my treatment preferences as expressed in PART TWO (if I have filled out PART TWO), my religious and other beliefs and values, and how I have handled medical and other important issues in the past. If what I would decide is still unclear, then my health care agent should make decisions for me that my health care agent believes are in my best interest, considering the benefits, burdens, and risks of my current circumstances and treatment options.

5. Powers of Health Care Proxy After Death

(A) Autopsy

My health care agent will have the power to authorize an autopsy of my body unless I have limited my health care agent ́s power by initialing below.

My health care proxy will have the power to authorize an autopsy of my body:

My health care agent will not have the power to authorize an autopsy of my body (unless an autopsy is required by law).

Initial below to affirm your choice:

(B) Organ Donation and Donation of Body

My health care agent will have the power to make a disposition (aka donation) of any part or all of my body for medical purposes pursuant to the Georgia Anatomical Gift Act, unless I have limited my health care agent ́s power by initialing below.

My health care agent will have the power to make a disposition of my body for use in a medical study program.

My health care agent will not have the power to make a disposition of my body for use in a medical study program.

Initial below to affirm your choice:

My health care agent will have the power to donate any of my organs.

My health care agent will not have the power to donate any of my organs.

Initial below to affirm your choice:

(C) Final Disposition of Body

My health care agent will have the power to make decisions about the final disposition of my body.

I want the following person to make decisions about the final disposition of my body:

My health care agent will not have authority to make a final disposition of my body. Instead, I authorize the person identified above to make that decision.

Initial below to affirm your choice:

I wish for my body to be:

Initial below to affirm your choice:

PART TWO - Treatment Preferences

PART TWO will be effective only if you are unable to communicate your treatment preferences after reasonable and appropriate efforts have been made to communicate with you about your treatment preferences. PART TWO will be effective even if PART ONE is not completed. If you have not selected a health care agent in PART ONE, or if your health care agent is not available, then PART TWO will provide your physician and other health care providers with your treatment preferences. If you have selected a health care agent in PART ONE, then your health care agent will have the authority to make all health care decisions for you regarding matters covered by PART TWO. Your health care agent will be guided by your treatment preferences and other factors described in Section (4) of PART ONE.

6. Conditions

Identify under which conditions you want PART TWO to be effective. Select one or both and initial under each.

PART TWO will be effective if I am in any of the following conditions:

Initial below to affirm your choice:

Initial below to affirm your choice:

My condition will be determined in writing after personal examination by my attending physician and a second physician in accordance with currently accepted medical standards.

7. Treatment Preferences

State your treatment preference by initialing (A), (B), or (C). If you choose (C), state your additional treatment preferences by initialing one or more of the statements following (C). You may provide additional instructions about your treatment preferences in the next section. You will be provided with comfort care, including pain relief, but you may also want to state your specific preferences regarding pain relief in the next section.

If I am in any condition that I initialed in Section (6) above and I can no longer communicate my treatment preferences after reasonable and appropriate efforts have been made to communicate with me about my treatment preferences, then:

(Choose one of the options below. If you select the third option, additional opens will appear.)

Initial below to affirm your choice:

If I am unable to take nutrition by mouth, I want to receive nutrition by tube or other medical means.

Initial below to affirm your choice:

If I am unable to take fluids by mouth, I want to receive fluids by tube or other medical means.

Initial below to affirm your choice:

If I need assistance to breathe, I want to have a ventilator used.

Initial below to affirm your choice:

If my heart or pulse has stopped, I want to have cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) used.

Initial below to affirm your choice:

8. Additional Statements

This section is optional. PART TWO will be effective even if this section is left blank. This section allows you to state additional treatment preferences, to provide additional guidance to your health care agent (if you have selected a health care agent in PART ONE), or to provide information about your personal and religious values about your medical treatment. For example, you may want to state your treatment preferences regarding medications to fight infection, surgery, amputation, blood transfusion, or kidney dialysis. Understanding that you cannot foresee everything that could happen to you after you can no longer communicate your treatment preferences, you may want to provide guidance to your health care agent (if you have selected a health care agent in PART ONE) about following your treatment preferences. You may want to state your specific preferences regarding pain relief.

9. In Case of Pregnancy

PART TWO will be effective even if this section is left blank.

I understand that under Georgia law, PART TWO generally will have no force and effect if I am pregnant unless the fetus is not viable and I indicate by initialing below that I want PART TWO to be carried out.

I want PART TWO to be carried out if my fetus is not viable.

Initial below to affirm your choice:

PART THREE - Guardianship

10. Guardianship

PART THREE is optional. This advance directive for health care will be effective even if PART THREE is left blank. If you wish to nominate a person to be your guardian in the event a court decides that a guardian should be appointed, complete PART THREE. A court will appoint a guardian for you if the court finds that you are not able to make significant responsible decisions for yourself regarding your personal support, safety, or welfare. A court will appoint the person nominated by you if the court finds that the appointment will serve your best interest and welfare. If you have selected a health care agent in PART ONE, you may (but are not required to) nominate the same person to be your guardian. If your health care agent and guardian are not the same person, your health care agent will have priority over your guardian in making your health care decisions, unless a court determines otherwise.

Guardianship Preferences

Initial below to affirm your choice:

PART FOUR - Effectiveness and Signatures

This advance directive for health care will become effective only if I am unable or choose not to make or communicate my own health care decisions.

This form revokes any advance directive for health care, durable power of attorney for health care, health care proxy, or living will that I have completed before this date.

Unless I have initialed below and have provided alternative future dates or events, this advance directive for health care will become effective at the time I sign it and will remain effective until my death (and after my death to the extent authorized in Section (5) of PART ONE)

When do you want this form to take effect?

Initial below to affirm your choice:

Finalizing Your Responses

After you submit your responses, you will be taken to the completed form ready for your digital signature. Then you will be prompted to identify the name and email of your two witnesses.

It's important to use legally legitimate witnesses by following the below requirements. It's good for others to know you have executed a health care proxy.

Witness Requirements

You must sign and date or acknowledge signing and dating this form in the presence of two witnesses. Both witnesses must be of sound mind and must be at least 18 years of age, but the witnesses do not have to be together or present with you when you sign this form.

A witness:

  • Cannot be a person who was selected to be your health care agent or back-up health care agent in PART ONE;

  • Cannot be a person who will knowingly inherit anything from you or otherwise knowingly gain a financial benefit from your death; or

  • Cannot be a person who is directly involved in your health care.

Only one of the witnesses may be an employee, agent, or medical staff member of the hospital, skilled nursing facility, hospice, or other health care facility in which you are receiving health care (but this witness cannot be directly involved in your health care).

By signing, I state that I am emotionally and mentally capable of making this advance directive for health care and that I understand its purpose and effect.