Adults and Consent to Health Care: Difference between revisions
From Clicklaw Wikibooks
Adults and Consent to Health Care (view source)
Revision as of 04:20, 17 February 2019
, 17 February 2019→Effect of an advance directive
Dial-A-Law (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Dial-A-Law (talk | contribs) |
||
Line 48: | Line 48: | ||
====Effect of an advance directive==== | ====Effect of an advance directive==== | ||
Generally speaking, if an adult needs health care and is incapable of giving or refusing consent to the health care — and the health care provider doesn’t know of any | Generally speaking, if an adult needs health care and is incapable of giving or refusing consent to the health care — and the health care provider doesn’t know of any [[Power of Attorney and Representation Agreements (Script 180)|representative]] or [[Committeeship (Script 426)|committee]] with authority to make decisions for the adult — then the health care provider must follow any advance directive they are aware of. | ||
But there are exceptions. A health care provider does '''not''' have to follow the instructions in an advance directive if they reasonably believe any of these things: | But there are exceptions. A health care provider does '''not''' have to follow the instructions in an advance directive if they reasonably believe any of these things: |