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Under AB 2338 (codified at Probate Code 4712), a health care provider or a designee of the health care facility caring for the patient may choose a surrogate to make health care decisions on the patients behalf, as appropriate in the given situation. Hence it is the responsibility of the providerin a nursing
Summary. In a medical emergency, the treating doctor will make decisions about your immediate care. Family members may be involved in making healthcare decisions for you if you are unable to make decisions and it is not a medical emergency.
If you cannot communicate and do not have an advance directive, your physician will try to contact a member of your immediate family. Your health care choices will be made by the family member that your physician is able to contact.
Stated simply: A do-not resuscitate order says that if your heart stops beating, or if you stop breathing, you dont want to be resuscitated. An advance directive is more general. You can specify your wishes if you are incapacitated.
If you do not have an advance directive and you are unable to make decisions on your own, the state laws where you live will determine who may make medical decisions on your behalf. This is typically your spouse, your parents if they are available, or your children if they are adults.
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The advance health care directive provides a clear statement of your wishes about prolonging your life or withholding or withdrawing treatment. You can also choose to request relief from pain even if doing so hastens death.
You can have someone (called your agent or attorneys-in-fact) make medical decisions for you. Your agent should be someone you trust. To do this, you write the agents name in a document called an Advanced Health Care Directive. (It used to be called a power of attorney for health care.)
As of Jan. 1, 2023, Indiana law permits any form or documentation for an advance directive. To ensure they are legal, they need to be signed by the patient and witnessed by two people or one notary. The witnesses cannot be the named Health Care Representative and only one can be a relative.

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