Difference between revisions of "Legal Issues in Residential Care: An Advocate's Manual"
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*'''[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care|B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making]] | *'''[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care|B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making]] | ||
**[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care#Statutory Substitutes - Temporary Substitute Decision-Making for Health Decisions|Statutory Substitutes - Temporary Substitute Decision-Making for Health Decisions]]{{·}}[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care#Other Tools by Which People Are Given Authority as Substitutes|Other Tools by Which People Are Given Authority as Substitutes]]{{·}}[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care#Court Appointed Substitutes - Adult Guardianship/ Committeeship|Court Appointed Substitutes - Adult Guardianship/ Committeeship]]{{·}}[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care#Substitute Decision-Making | **[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care#1. Statutory Substitutes - Temporary Substitute Decision-Making for Health Decisions|1. Statutory Substitutes - Temporary Substitute Decision-Making for Health Decisions]]{{·}}[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care#2. Other Tools by Which People Are Given Authority as Substitutes|2. Other Tools by Which People Are Given Authority as Substitutes]]{{·}}[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care#3. Court Appointed Substitutes - Adult Guardianship/ Committeeship|3. Court Appointed Substitutes - Adult Guardianship/ Committeeship]]{{·}}[[B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making and Residential Care#4. Substitute Decision-Making Through Instructions - Advance Care Directives|4. Substitute Decision-Making Through Instructions - Advance Care Directives]] | ||
*'''[[Chapter Seven Resources and Appendix|Chapter Seven Resources and Appendix]] | *'''[[Chapter Seven Resources and Appendix|Chapter Seven Resources and Appendix]] |
Revision as of 18:30, 27 June 2014
This page is under development. |
This is a Clicklaw Wikibook, a collaborative, plain language legal publication that is updated as a wiki and can be printed or downloaded. |
Legal Issues in Residential Care: An Advocate's Manual is from the BC Centre for Elder Advocacy and Support.
Contents[edit]
Chapter One - Statutory Framework[edit]
Chapter Two - Residents' Bill of Rights[edit]
Chapter Three - Legal Issues in Admission and Transfer[edit]
Chapter Four - Legal Issues When Living in Residential Care[edit]
Chapter Five - Rights, Remedies and Problem Resolution[edit]
- E. Directing Concerns to Health Authorities
- Patient Care Quality Office · Patient Care Quality Review Board · Community Care Licensing Offices · Local Ethics Committees · BC Care Aide and Community Health Worker Registry · Directing Concerns to External Bodies · Directing Concerns to Review Boards · Addressing Systemic Concerns: BC Seniors Advocate
Chapter Six - Consent and Capacity[edit]
- B. Part 2 Health Care Consent
- The Conditions of Health Care Consent · Who Must Seek Consent for Health Care? · What is Meant by Health Care? · Consent Rights · The Consent Process · How Does a Person Give Consent? · Exceptions to Requiring Consent · Health Care at the Margins · Areas of Confusion Around Health Care Consent in Residential Care · Information Rights · Exploiting Consent Loopholes?
Chapter Seven - Substitute Decision-Making[edit]
- B. Types of Substitute Decision-Making
- 1. Statutory Substitutes - Temporary Substitute Decision-Making for Health Decisions · 2. Other Tools by Which People Are Given Authority as Substitutes · 3. Court Appointed Substitutes - Adult Guardianship/ Committeeship · 4. Substitute Decision-Making Through Instructions - Advance Care Directives
About this Wikibook[edit]
About the BC Centre for Elder Advocacy and Support[edit]
The BC CEAS is a non-profit charitable organization located in British Columbia, Canada. We are committed to:
- Protecting the legal rights of older adults;
- Increasing access to justice for older adults;
- Informing the public about elder abuse; and
- Providing supportive programs for older adults who have been abused.
Find out more at bcceas.ca/