Catholic health care directive 2025

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Advanced care planning, also known as advance directives or living wills, are legal documents that Catholics can use to state that, in no uncertain terms, your wishes regarding the type of medical care that you want to receive if you arent able to make those decisions then and there.
Ordinary means of medical treatment or care are morally obligatory. From a Catholic perspective, this includes various forms of care that may be judged ordinary for a particular patient even when death is near. But Catholics are not bound to prolong the dying process by using every medical treatment available.
Eternal rest grant unto him/her, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon him/her. May he/she rest in peace. Amen. May almighty God bless us with his peace and strength, the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.
In sharp contrast, the Catholic belief in a right to health care derives from concern for the dignity of the human person, created in the image of God. This dignity, however, cannot be understood simply in an individualistic sense.
Withholding ordinary care with the intention of causing death is considered passive euthanasia and is always gravely contrary to Gods will. But Catholics are not morally bound to prolong the dying process by using every medical treat- ment available. Allowing natural death to occur is not the same as killing.
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In 2018, Dignity Health and Catholic Health Initiatives received a merger approval from the Catholic Church, through the Vatican. Merged on February 1, 2019, as CommonSpirit Health, the new company formed as the largest Catholic health system, and the second-largest nonprofit hospital chain, in the United States.
A Catholic Healthcare Directive lets you express your specific wishes regarding medical treatments, life-sustaining measures, and end-of-life care. This directive ensures that your healthcare decisions are aligned with your personal beliefs and values.
This Catholic advance directive for health care is a document that names someone besides yourself as your legal care agent. The person you appoint has full legal rights to make any and all health care decisions for you in the event you cant make them yourself.

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