Testamentos Mutuos o Últimas Voluntades y Testamentos para Personas Solteras que conviven con Hijos Menores
This law summary is not intended to be all-inclusive
of the law of wills in Florida. However, it does contain a summary of many
of the material Florida law requirements.
An advance directive is a witnessed written document or oral statement in which instructions are given by a principal or in which the principal's desires are expressed concerning any aspect of the principal's health care, and includes, but is not limited to, the designation of a health care surrogate, a living will, or an anatomical gift.
An end-stage condition is a condition that is caused by injury, disease, or illness which has resulted in severe and permanent deterioration, indicated by incapacity and complete physical dependency, and for which, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, treatment of the irreversible condition would be medically ineffective.
A health care decision is:
(1) Informed consent, refusal of consent, or withdrawal of consent to any and all health care, including life-prolonging procedures.
(2) The decision to apply for private, public, government, or veterans' benefits to defray the cost of health care.
(3) The right of access to all records of the principal reasonably necessary for a health care surrogate to make decisions involving health care and to apply for benefits.
(4) The decision to make an anatomical gift.
Incapacity or incompetent is when the patient is physically or mentally unable to communicate a willful and knowing health care decision.
Informed consent is consent voluntarily given by a person after a sufficient explanation and disclosure of the subject matter involved to enable that person to have a general understanding of the treatment or procedure and the medically acceptable alternatives, including the substantial risks and hazards inherent in the proposed treatment or procedures, and to make a knowing health care decision without coercion or undue influence.
A life-prolonging procedure is any medical procedure, treatment, or intervention, including artificially provided sustenance and hydration, which sustains, restores, or supplants a spontaneous vital function. The term does not include the administration of medication or performance of medical procedure, when such medication or procedure is deemed necessary to provide comfort care or to alleviate pain.
A Living will or declaration is:
(1) A witnessed document in writing, voluntarily executed by the principal in accordance with 765.302; or
(2) A witnessed oral statement made by the principal expressing the principal's instructions concerning life-prolonging procedures.
A persistent vegetative state is a permanent and irreversible condition of unconsciousness in which there is:
(1) The absence of voluntary action or cognitive behavior of any kind.
(2) An inability to communicate or interact purposefully with the environment.
A principal is a competent adult executing an advance directive and on whose behalf health care decisions are to be made.
A proxy is a competent adult who has not been expressly designated to make health care decisions for a particular incapacitated individual, but who is authorized pursuant to 765.401 to make health care decisions for an individual.
A surrogate is any competent adult expressly designated by a principal to make health care decisions on behalf of the principal upon the principal's incapacity.
A terminal condition means a condition caused by injury, disease, or illness from which there is no reasonable medical probability of recovery and which, without treatment, can be expected to cause death.
A competent adult may, at any time, make a living will or written declaration and direct the providing, withholding, or withdrawal of life-prolonging procedures in the event that he or she has a terminal condition, has an end-stage condition, or is in a persistent vegetative state.
A living will must be signed by the principal in the presence of two subscribing witnesses, one of whom is neither a spouse nor a blood relative of the principal. If the principal is physically unable to sign the living will, one of the witnesses must subscribe the principal's signature in the principal's presence and at the principal's direction.
It is the responsibility of the principal to provide for notification to her or his attending or treating physician that the living will has been made. An attending or treating physician or health care facility which is so notified must make the living will or a copy thereof a part of the principal's medical records.
A properly executed living will establishes a rebuttable presumption of clear and convincing evidence of the principal's wishes.
The statutory form is suggested but is not required.
If a person has made a living will expressing his or her desires concerning life-prolonging procedures but has not designated a surrogate to execute his or her wishes concerning life-prolonging procedures or appointed a health care surrogate, the attending physician should proceed as directed by the principal in the living will.
Before proceeding in accordance with the principal's living will, it must be determined that:
(1) The principal does not have a reasonable medical probability of recovering capacity so that the right could be exercised directly by the principal.
(2) The principal has a terminal condition, has an end-stage condition, or is in a persistent vegetative state.
(3) Any limitations or conditions expressed orally or in a written declaration have been carefully considered and satisfied.
In determining whether the patient has a terminal condition, has an end-stage condition, or is in a persistent vegetative state or may recover capacity, or whether a medical condition or limitation referred to in an advance directive exists, the patient's attending or treating physician and at least one other consulting physician must separately examine the patient. The findings of each that examination must be documented in the patient's medical record and signed by each examining physician before life-prolonging procedures may be withheld or withdrawn.
An advance directive or designation of a surrogate may be amended or revoked at any time by a competent principal:
(1) By means of a signed, dated writing;
(2) By means of the physical cancellation or destruction of the advance directive by the principal or by another in the principal's presence and at the principal's direction;
(3) By means of an oral expression of intent to amend or revoke; or
(4) By means of a subsequently executed advance directive that is materially different from a previously executed advance directive.
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