Living Will. Download online state specific an Advance Directive, Revocable Living Will Forms
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To better understand the issues relating to your legal situation or problem, our legal information and other law related facts may be of interest to you
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Health-care proxies and Living Wills - Making known your medical wishes now can save a lot of heartache later A Living Will (also known as an advance medical directive) is a statement of your wishes for the kind of life-sustaining medical intervention you want, or don't want, in the event that you become terminally ill and unable to communicate. Most states have Living Will statutes that define when a Living Will goes into effect (for example, when a person has less than six months to live). State law may also restrict the medical interventions to which such directives apply. Your condition and the terms of your directive also will be subject to interpretation. Different institutions and doctors may come to different conclusions. As a result, in some instances a Living Will may not be followed. Nevertheless, a patient's wishes are taken very seriously, and an advance medical directive is one of the best ways to have a say in your medical care when you can't express yourself otherwise. You increase your chances of enforcing your directive when you have a health-care agent advocating on your behalf. You can name such an agent by way of a health-care proxy, or by assigning what's called a medical Power of Attorney. You sign a Legal document in which you name someone you trust to make Medical Decisions on your behalf in the event that you can't do so for yourself. A health-care proxy applies to all instances when you're incapacitated, not just if you're terminally ill. Choose your health-care agent carefully. That person should be able to do three key things: understand important medical information regarding your treatment, handle the stress of making tough decisions, and keep your best interests and wishes in mind when making those decisions.
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Return to all Living Will legal information
Legal Articles about Living Will
Living Will Frequently Asked Questions
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Living Will And Durable Power Of Attorney For Health Care. What Is The Difference?
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Who Will Handle Your Health Care Proxy
There's no simpler estate planning document than a health care proxy in which you name someone ...
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Entrusting Life and Death Decisions
If you don't have a health-care proxy and a living will, your loved ones likely to suffer for it ...
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Are YOU grinding your teeth down? How to treat and eliminate the common stress-related disorder that even affects ...
Daily Mail
Stress is of course a growing concern in workaholic, smartphone addicted 24/7 Britain too, and, by proxy teeth grinding is becoming all the more common (the NHS estimates that 70 per cent of teeth grinding cases are caused by stress and anxiety). The ...
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Eat seasonal produce for better gut health: Eating like our hunter-gatherer ancestors boosts the immune system
Daily Mail
Eating a diet of produce that is in season can boost your gut health, a new study suggests. ... An international team led by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine studied tribes living in the Savannah, known as The Hadza ...
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