Every person in Minnesota should have a Health Care Directive to designate someone to make health and medical decisions for them if they are unable. A Healthcare Directive may also be called a Living Will, Advanced Directive, or Healthcare Power of Attorney.
Minnesota Health Care Directive Law
Minnesota law allows you to inform others of your health care wishes. You have the right to state your wishes or appoint an agent in writing so that others will know what you want if you can’t tell them because of illness or injury. The information that follows tells about health care directives and how to prepare them. It does not give every detail of the law.
What is a Health Care Directive?
A health care directive is a written document that informs other of your wishes about your health care. It allows you to name a person (“agent”) to decide for you if you are unable to decide. It also allows you to name an agent if you want someone else to decide for you. You must be at least 18 years old to make a health care directive.
Why Have a Health Care Directive?
A health care directive is important if your attending physician determines you can’t communicate your health care choices (because of physical or mental incapacity). It is also important if you wish to have someone else make your health care decisions. In some circumstances, your directive may state that you want someone other than an attending physician to decide when you cannot make your own decisions.
Why Do I Need a Health Care Directive?
Simply put, putting your wishes about your health care in writing helps make sure they’ll be known and followed by family, friends, health care providers and others. Sometimes decisions must be made when a person isn’t able to decide or communicate preferences. A health care directive communicates your wishes when you’re not able to.
Must I Have a Health Care Directive? What Happens if I Don’t Have One?
You don’t have to have a health care directive. But, writing one helps to make sure your wishes are followed.
You will still receive medical treatment if you don’t have a written directive. Health care providers will listen to what people close to you say about your treatment preferences, but the best way to be sure your wishes are followed is to have a health care directive.
How Do I Make a Health Care Directive?
There are forms for health care directives. You don’t have to use a form, but your health care directive must meet the following requirements to be legal:
- Be in writing and dated.
- State your name.
- Be signed by you or someone you authorize to sign for you, when you can understand and communicate your health care wishes.
- Have your signature verified by a notary public or two witnesses.
- Include the appointment of an agent to make health care decisions for you and/or instructions about the health care choices you wish to make.
Before you prepare or revise your directive, you should discuss your health care wishes with your doctor or other health care provider.
Information about how to obtain forms for preparation of your health care directive can be found below.
What are Topics to Include in a Health Care Directive?
See this article for topics to include in your health care directive.
I Prepared My Directive in Another State. Is It Still Good?
Health care directives prepared in other states are legal if they meet the requirements of the other state’s laws or the Minnesota requirements. But requests for assisted suicide will not be followed.
What Can I Put in a Health Care Directive?
You have many choices of what to put in your health care directive. For example, you may include:
- The person you trust as your agent to make health care decisions for you. You can name alternative agents in case the first agent is unavailable, or joint agents.
- Your goals, values and preferences about health care.
- The types of medical treatment you would want (or not want).
- How you want your agent or agents to decide.
- Where you want to receive care.
- Instructions about artificial nutrition and hydration.
- Mental health treatments that use electroshock therapy or neuroleptic medications.
- Instructions if you are pregnant.
- Donation of organs, tissues and eyes.
- Funeral arrangements.
- Who you would like as your guardian or conservator if there is a court action.
You may be as specific or as general as you wish. You can choose which issues or treatments to deal with in your health care directive.
Are There Any Limits to What I Can Put in My Health Care Directive?
There are some limits about what you can put in your health care directive. For instance:
- Your agent must be at least 18 years of age.
- Your agent cannot be your health care provider, unless the health care provider is a family member or you give reasons for the naming of the agent in your directive.
- You cannot request health care treatment that is outside of reasonable medical practice.
- You cannot request assisted suicide.
How Long Does a Health Care Directive Last? Can I Change It?
Your health care directive lasts until you change or cancel it. As long as the changes meet the health care directive requirements listed above, you may cancel your directive by any of the following:
- A written statement saying you want to cancel it.
- Destroying it.
- Telling at least two other people you want to cancel it.
- Writing a new health care directive.
What If My Health Care Provider Refuses to Follow My Health Care Directive?
Your health care provider generally will follow your health care directive, or any instructions from your agent, as long as the health care follows reasonable medical practice. But, you or your agent cannot request treatment that will not help you or which the provider cannot provide. If the provider cannot follow your agent’s directions about life-sustaining treatment, the provider must inform the agent. The provider must also document the notice in your medical record. The provider must allow the agency to arrange to transfer you to another provider who will follow the agent’s directions.
What If I’ve Already Prepared a Health Care Document? Is It Still Good?
Before August 1, 1998, Minnesota law provided for several other types of directives, including living wills, durable health care powers of attorney and mental health declarations.
The law changed so people can use one form for all their health care instructions.
Forms created before August 1, 1998, are still legal if they followed the law in effect when written. They are also legal if they meet the requirements of the new law (described above). You may want to review any existing documents to make sure they say what you want and meet all requirements.
What Should I Do With My Health Care Directive After I Have Signed It?
You should inform others of your health care directive and give people copies of it. You may wish to inform family members, your health care agent or agents, and your health care providers that you have a health care directive. You should give them a copy. It’s a good idea to review and update your directive as your needs change. Keep it in a safe place where it is easily found.
What if I believe a Health Care Provider Has Not Followed Health Care Directive Requirements?
Complaints of this type can be filed with the Office of Health Facility Complaints at 651-201-4200 (Metro Area) or Toll-free at 1-800-369-7994.
What if I Believe a Health Plan Has Not Followed Health Care Directive Requirements?
Complaints of this type can be filed with the Minnesota Health Information Clearinghouse at 651-201-5178 or Toll-free at 1-800-657-3793.
What are Common Terms for a Health Care Directive?
Common legal terms related to a Minnesota Health Care Directive include
- Advance directive: A written tool used to guide health care decisions when an individual is unable to do so because of a medical condition. Livings Wills and Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care are different types of advance directives. In Minnesota, the living will and durable Power of Attorney for Health Care are combined and called a Health Care Directive.
- Health care directive: The term for Minnesota’s advance directive that combines a living will and durable-power-of-attorney-for-health-care into one document .
- Health care agent : One or more persons legally authorized to make health care decisions for you, if at a future time you are unable to make or communicate your own decisions.
- POLST: A medical order based on your doctor’s understanding of your wishes regarding life-sustaining treatment. Physicians complete this medical order based on in-person conversations with you, or the wishes expressed in your health care directive. The POLST communicates your decisions to other health care providers during an emergency. A DNR (do not resuscitate) is a POLST that only covers respiratory resuscitation.
How Do I Complete a Health Care Directive?
It’s easy!
- Identify a person, called an agent, to make health decisions for you if you become unable to make or communicate decisions.
- Write instructions about your health care goals, fears and concerns. You will include what you want as well as what you don’t want. You can also state limits of the powers you want your agent to have.
- Sign and date it to make it legal. Then have the document witnessed by a notary public or two people. (Neither of them can be the agent.)
- Share copies of your directive with your agent and health care providers.
The Minnesota Health Care Directive Planning Toolkit has all the forms you need.
Where Can I Get a Free Health Care Directive Template/Form?
The Minnesota Attorney General’s Office provides this free Health Care Directive form to use as a template for your loved ones: Minnesota Health Care Directive Form.
CREDIT: Some of this was extracted from information provided by Minnesota government offices.