Power of Attorney

Definition

Power of attorney, also known as durable medical power of attorney, is a legal mechanism that empowers a designated person to make medical decisions for a patient should the patient be unable to make the decisions due to incapacitation.


Purpose

Power of attorney assures that a patient's wishes are acknowledged in the medical setting. Along with other legal documents such as a living will and a do not resuscitate (DNR) order, the power of attorney designates the agent or person who is legally authorized to act for the patient in the medical setting. All three mechanisms are a part of what is know as advanced medical directives.


Description

The patient's agent is the person appointed by the patient to represent him or her in medical situations where decisions must be made. According to the Patient Self-Determination Act of 1991, patient autonomy is represented in the health care agent. This surrogate, through his/her power of attorney authorization, has all of the rights that the patient has with respect to deciding on medical procedure. These include the rights to refuse treatment, to agree to treatment, or to have treatment withdrawn.

Guided by a living will, which is a document developed in advance that reflects the patient's wishes, the agent acts on behalf of the patient with providers, administrators, and other legal agents. In most states, surrogates can act for the patient on any medical procedure, including a decision to refuse life support procedures such as resuscitation. States differ, however, on whether health agents can invoke a DNR order.

In the difficult times that families experience with a seriously ill or terminally ill family member, health agents play a major role in making decisions and stipulating what the patient's wishes are with respect to his or her medical and/or dying needs. Health agents can work with or without a living will. The crucial feature is that the person having power of attorney is empowered to respond to changes in the patient's health and to make flexible decisions. It is the health agent, rather than the patient, who must be apprised of all medical options, weigh the risk and benefits, and make a decision based on the specific situation.



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