23-06.5 Health Care Directives

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CHAPTER 23-06.5HEALTH CARE DIRECTIVES23-06.5-01.Statement of purpose.Every competent adult has the right andresponsibility to make the decisions relating to the adult's own health care, including the decision<br>to have health care provided, withheld, or withdrawn. The purpose of this chapter is to enable<br>adults to retain control over their own health care during periods of incapacity through health<br>directives and the designation of an individual to make health care decisions on their behalf. This<br>chapter does not condone, authorize, or approve mercy killing, or permit an affirmative or<br>deliberate act or omission to end life, other than to allow the natural process of dying.23-06.5-02. Definitions. In this chapter, unless the context otherwise requires:1.&quot;Agent&quot; means an adult to whom authority to make health care decisions is<br>delegated under a health care directive for the individual granting the power.2.&quot;Attending physician&quot; means the physician, selected by or assigned to a patient, who<br>has primary responsibility for the treatment and care of the patient.3.&quot;Capacity to make health care decisions&quot; means the ability to understand and<br>appreciate the nature and consequences of a health care decision, including the<br>significant benefits and harms of and reasonable alternatives to any proposed health<br>care, and the ability to communicate a health care decision.4.&quot;Health care decision&quot; means consent to, refusal to consent to, withdrawal of<br>consent to, or request for any care, treatment, service, or procedure to maintain,<br>diagnose, or treat an individual's physical or mental condition, including:a.Selection and discharge of health care providers and institutions;b.Approval or disapproval of diagnostic tests, surgical procedures, programs of<br>medication, and orders not to resuscitate;c.Directions to provide, withhold, or withdraw artificial nutrition and hydration and<br>all other forms of health care; andd.Establishment of an individual's abode within or without the state and personal<br>security safeguards for an individual, to the extent decisions on these matters<br>relate to the health care needs of the individual.5.&quot;Health care directive&quot; means a written instrument that complies with this chapter<br>and includes one or more health care instructions, a power of attorney for health<br>care, or both.6.&quot;Health care instruction&quot; means an individual's direction concerning a health care<br>decision for the individual, including a written statement of the individual's values,<br>preferences, guidelines, or directions regarding health care directed to health care<br>providers, others assisting with health care, family members, an agent, or others.7.&quot;Health care provider&quot; means an individual or facility licensed, certified, or otherwise<br>authorized or permitted by law to administer health care, for profit or otherwise, in<br>the ordinary course of business or professional practice.8.&quot;Long-term care facility&quot; or &quot;long-term care services provider&quot; means a long-term<br>care facility as defined in section 50-10.1-01.9.&quot;Principal&quot; means an adult who has executed a health care directive.Page No. 123-06.5-03. Health care directive.1.A principal may execute a health care directive. A health care directive may include<br>one or more health care instructions to health care providers, others assisting with<br>health care, family members, and a health care agent. A health care directive may<br>include a power of attorney to appoint an agent to make health care decisions for the<br>principal when the principal lacks the capacity to make health care decisions, unless<br>otherwise specified in the health care directive. Subject to the provisions of this<br>chapter and any express limitations set forth by the principal in the health care<br>directive, the agent has the authority to make any and all health care decisions on<br>the principal's behalf that the principal could make.2.After consultation with the attending physician and other health care providers, the<br>agent shall make health care decisions:a.In accordance with the agent's knowledge of the principal's wishes and religious<br>or moral beliefs, as stated orally, or as contained in the principal's health care<br>directive; orb.If the principal's wishes are unknown, in accordance with the agent's<br>assessment of the principal's best interests. In determining the principal's best<br>interests, the agent shall consider the principal's personal values to the extent<br>known to the agent.3.A health care directive, including the agent's authority, is in effect only when the<br>principal lacks capacity to make health care decisions, as certified in writing by the<br>principal's attending physician and filed in the principal's medical record, and ceases<br>to be effective upon a determination that the principal has recovered capacity.4.Notwithstanding subsection 3, the principal may authorize in a health care directive<br>that the agent make health care decisions for the principal even though the principal<br>retains capacity to make health care decisions.In that case, the health caredirective is in effect as stated in the health care directive under any conditions the<br>principal may impose. The principal's authorization under this subsection may be<br>revoked in the same manner as a health care directive may be revoked under<br>section 23-06.5-07.5.The principal's attending physician shall make reasonable efforts to inform the<br>principal of any proposed treatment, or of any proposal to withdraw or withhold<br>treatment.6.Nothing in this chapter permits an agent to consent to admission to a mental health<br>facility or state institution for a period of more than forty-five days without a mental<br>health proceeding or other court order, or to psychosurgery, abortion, or sterilization,<br>unless the procedure is first approved by court order.23-06.5-04. Restrictions on who can act as agent. A person may not exercise theauthority of agent while serving in one of the following capacities:1.The principal's health care provider;2.A nonrelative of the principal who is an employee of the principal's health care<br>provider;3.The principal's long-term care services provider; or4.A nonrelative of the principal who is an employee of the principal's long-term care<br>services provider.Page No. 223-06.5-05. Health care directive requirements - Execution and witnesses.1.To be legally sufficient in this state, a health care directive must:a.Be in writing;b.Be dated;c.State the principal's name;d.Be executed by a principal with capacity to do so with the signature of the<br>principal or with the signature of another person authorized by the principal to<br>sign on behalf of the principal;e.Contain verification of the principal's signature or the signature of the person<br>authorized by the principal to sign on behalf of the principal, either by a notary<br>public or by witnesses as provided under this chapter; andf.Include a health care instruction or a power of attorney for health care, or both.2.A health care directive must be signed by the principal and that signature must be<br>verified by a notary public or at least two or more subscribing witnesses who are at<br>least eighteen years of age. A person notarizing the document may be an employee<br>of a health care or long-term care provider providing direct care to the principal. At<br>least one witness to the execution of the document must not be a health care or<br>long-term care provider providing direct care to the principal or an employee of a<br>health care or long-term care provider providing direct care to the principal on the<br>date of execution. The notary public or any witness may not be, at the time of<br>execution, the agent, the principal's spouse or heir, a person related to the principal<br>by blood, marriage, or adoption, a person entitled to any part of the estate of the<br>principal upon the death of the principal under a will or deed in existence or by<br>operation of law, any other person who has, at the time of execution, any claims<br>against the estate of the principal, a person directly financially responsible for the<br>principal's medical care, or the attending physician of the principal. If the principal is<br>physically unable to sign, the directive may be signed by the principal's name being<br>written by some other person in the principal's presence and at the principal's<br>express direction.23-06.5-05.1.Suggested health care directive form.A health care directive mayinclude provisions consistent with this chapter, including:1.The designation of one or more alternate agents to act if the named agent is not<br>reasonably available to serve;2.Directions to joint agents regarding the process or standards by which the agents<br>are to reach a health care decision for the principal, and a statement whether joint<br>agents may act independently of one another;3.Limitations, if any, on the right of the agent or any alternate agents to receive,<br>review, obtain copies of, and consent to the disclosure of the principal's medical<br>records;4.Limitations, if any, on the nomination of the agent as guardian under chapter<br>30.1-28;5.A document of gift for the purpose of making an anatomical gift, as set forth in<br>chapter 23-06.6 or an amendment to, revocation of, or refusal to make an<br>anatomical gift;Page No. 36.Limitations, if any, regarding the effect of dissolution or annulment of marriage on<br>the appointment of an agent;7.Health care instructions regarding artificially administered nutrition or hydration; and8.The designation of an agent authorized to make health care decisions for the<br>principal even though the principal retains the capacity to make health care<br>decisions.23-06.5-06. Acceptance of appointment - Withdrawal. To be effective, the agent mustaccept the appointment in writing. Subject to the right of the agent to withdraw, the acceptance<br>creates authority for the agent to make health care decisions on behalf of the principal at such<br>time as the principal becomes incapacitated.Until the principal becomes incapacitated, theagent may withdraw by giving notice to the principal. After the principal becomes incapacitated,<br>the agent may withdraw by giving notice to the attending physician. The attending physician<br>shall cause the withdrawal to be recorded in the principal's medical record.23-06.5-07. Revocation.1.A health care directive is revoked:a.By notification by the principal to the agent or a health care or long-term care<br>services provider orally, or in writing, or by any other act evidencing a specific<br>intent to revoke the directive; orb.By execution by the principal of a subsequent health care directive.2.A principal's health care or long-term care services provider who is informed of or<br>provided with a revocation of a health care directive shall immediately record the<br>revocation in the principal's medical record and notify the agent, if any, the attending<br>physician, and staff responsible for the principal's care of the revocation.3.Unless otherwise provided in the health care directive, if the spouse is the principal's<br>agent, the divorce of the principal and spouse revokes the appointment of the<br>divorced spouse as the principal's agent.23-06.5-08.Inspection and disclosure of medical information.Subject to anylimitations set forth in the health care directive by the principal, an agent whose authority is in<br>effect may for the purpose of making health care decisions:1.Request, review, and receive any information, oral or written, regarding the<br>principal's physical or mental health, including medical and hospital records;2.Execute any releases or other documents which may be required in order to obtain<br>such medical information; and3.Consent to the disclosure of such medical information.23-06.5-09. Duties of provider.1.A principal's health care or long-term care services provider, and employees thereof,<br>having knowledge of the principal's health care directive, are bound to follow the<br>health care decisions of the principal's designated agent or a health care instruction<br>to the extent they are consistent with this chapter and the health care directive.2.A principal's health care or long-term care services provider may decline to comply<br>with a health care decision of a principal's designated agent or a health care<br>instruction for reasons of conscience or other conflict. A provider that declines to<br>comply with a health care decision or instruction shall take all reasonable steps toPage No. 4transfer care of the principal to another health care provider who is willing to honor<br>the agent's health care decision, or instruction or directive, and shall provide<br>continuing care to the principal until a transfer can be effected.3.This chapter does not require any physician or other health care provider to take any<br>action contrary to reasonable medical standards.4.This chapter does not affect the responsibility of the attending physician or other<br>health care provider to provide treatment for a patient's comfort, care, or alleviation<br>of pain.5.Notwithstanding a contrary direction contained in a health care directive executed<br>under this chapter, health care must be provided to a pregnant principal unless, to a<br>reasonable degree of medical certainty as certified on the principal's medical record<br>by the attending physician and an obstetrician who has examined the principal, such<br>health care will not maintain the principal in such a way as to permit the continuing<br>development and live birth of the unborn child or will be physically harmful or<br>unreasonably painful to the principal or will prolong severe pain that cannot be<br>alleviated by medication.6.In the absence of a direction to the contrary contained in a health care directive<br>prepared under this chapter, nothing in this chapter requires a physician to withhold,<br>withdraw, or administer nutrition or hydration, or both, from or to the principal.<br>Nutrition or hydration, or both, must be withdrawn, withheld, or administered, if the<br>principal for whom the administration of nutrition or hydration is considered, has<br>directed in a health care directive the principal's desire that nutrition or hydration, or<br>both, be withdrawn, withheld, or administered. If a health care directive prepared<br>under this chapter does not indicate the principal's direction with respect to nutrition<br>or hydration, nutrition or hydration, or both, may be withdrawn or withheld if the<br>attending physician has determined that the administration of nutrition or hydration is<br>inappropriate because the nutrition or hydration cannot be physically assimilated by<br>the principal or would be physically harmful or would cause unreasonable physical<br>pain to the principal.23-06.5-10. Freedom from influence. A health care provider, long-term care servicesprovider, health care service plan, insurer issuing disability insurance, self-insured employee<br>welfare benefit plan, or nonprofit hospital service plan may not charge a person a different rate or<br>require any person to execute a health care directive as a condition of admission to a hospital or<br>long-term care facility nor as a condition of being insured for, or receiving, health care or<br>long-term care services. Health care or long-term care services may not be refused because a<br>person has executed a health care directive.23-06.5-11. Reciprocity. This chapter does not limit the enforceability of a health caredirective or similar instrument executed in another state or jurisdiction in compliance with the law<br>of that state or jurisdiction.23-06.5-12. Immunity.1.A person acting as agent pursuant to a health care directive or person authorized to<br>provide informed consent pursuant to section 23-12-13 may not be subjected to<br>criminal or civil liability for making a health care decision in good faith pursuant to the<br>provisions of this chapter or section 23-12-13.2.A health care or long-term care services provider, or any other person acting for the<br>provider or under the provider's control may not be subjected to civil or criminal<br>liability, or be deemed to have engaged in unprofessional conduct, for any act or<br>intentional failure to act done in good faith and with ordinary care if the act or<br>intentional failure to act is done pursuant to the dictates of a health care directive,Page No. 5the directives of the patient's agent, or other provisions of this chapter or section<br>23-12-13.3.A health care provider who administers health care necessary to keep the principal<br>alive, despite a health care decision of the agent to withhold or withdraw that health<br>care, or a health care provider who withholds health care that the provider has<br>determined to be contrary to reasonable medical standards, despite a health care<br>decision of the agent to provide the health care, may not be subjected to civil or<br>criminal liability or be deemed to have engaged in unprofessional conduct if that<br>health care provider promptly took all reasonable steps to:a.Notify the agent of the health care provider's unwillingness to comply;b.Document the notification in the principal's medical record; andc.Arrange to transfer care of the principal to another health care provider willing<br>to comply with the decision of the agent.23-06.5-13. Presumptions and application.1.Unless a court of competent jurisdiction determines otherwise, the appointment of<br>an agent in a health care directive executed pursuant to this chapter takes<br>precedence over any authority to make medical decisions granted to a guardian<br>pursuant to chapter 30.1-28.2.To the extent that health care directives conflict, the instrument executed later in<br>time controls.3.The principal is presumed to have the capacity to execute a health care directive<br>and to revoke a health care directive, absent clear and convincing evidence to the<br>contrary.4.A health care provider or agent may presume that a health care directive is legally<br>sufficient absent actual knowledge to the contrary.A health care directive ispresumed to be properly executed, absent clear and convincing evidence to the<br>contrary.5.An agent and a health care provider acting pursuant to the direction of an agent are<br>presumed to be acting in good faith, absent clear and convincing evidence to the<br>contrary.6.A health care directive is presumed to remain in effect until the principal modifies or<br>revokes it, absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary.7.This chapter does not create a presumption concerning the intention of an individual<br>who has not executed a health care directive and does not impair or supersede any<br>right or responsibility of an individual to consent, refuse to consent, or withdraw<br>consent to health care on behalf of another in the absence of a health care directive.8.A copy of a health care directive is presumed to be a true and accurate copy of the<br>executed original, absent clear and convincing evidence to the contrary, and must<br>be given the same effect as an original.9.Death resulting from the withholding or withdrawal of health care pursuant to a<br>health care directive in accordance with this chapter does not constitute, for any<br>purpose, a suicide or homicide.10.The making of a health care directive under this chapter does not affect in any<br>manner the sale, procurement, or issuance of any policy of life insurance or annuity,Page No. 6nor does it affect, impair, or modify the terms of an existing policy of life insurance or<br>annuity. A policy of life insurance or annuity is not legally impaired or invalidated in<br>any manner by the withholding or withdrawal of health care from an insured<br>principal, notwithstanding any term to the contrary.11.A person may not prohibit or require the execution of a health care directive as a<br>condition for being insured for, or receiving, health care services.12.This chapter does not affect the right of a patient to make decisions regarding use of<br>health care, so long as the patient is able to do so, or impair or supersede any right<br>or responsibility that a person has to effect the provision, withholding, or withdrawal<br>of health care.13.Health care directives prepared under this chapter which direct the withholding of<br>health care do not apply to emergency treatment performed in a prehospital<br>situation.23-06.5-14. Liability for health care costs. Liability for the cost of health care providedpursuant to the agent's decision is the same as if the health care were provided pursuant to the<br>principal's decision.23-06.5-15.Validity of previously executed durable powers of attorney or otherdirectives. A health care directive executed before August 1, 2005, which complies with the law<br>in effect at the time it was executed, including former chapter 23-06.4, must be given effect<br>pursuant to this chapter. This chapter does not affect the validity or enforceability of a durable<br>power of attorney for health care executed before August 1, 2005.23-06.5-16. Use of statutory form. The statutory health care directive form described insection 23-06.5-17 may be used and is an optional form, but not a required form, by which a<br>person may execute a health care directive pursuant to this chapter. Another form may be used<br>if it complies with this chapter.23-06.5-17. Optional health care directive form. The following is an optional form of ahealth care directive and is not a required form:HEALTH CARE DIRECTIVEI_________________________________ , understand this document allows me to doONE OR ALL of the following:PART I:Name another person (called the health care agent) to make health caredecisions for me if I am unable to make and communicate health care decisions for myself. My<br>health care agent must make health care decisions for me based on the instructions I provide in<br>this document (Part II), if any, the wishes I have made known to him or her, or my agent must act<br>in my best interest if I have not made my health care wishes known.AND/ORPART II: Give health care instructions to guide others making health care decisions forme. If I have named a health care agent, these instructions are to be used by the agent. These<br>instructions may also be used by my health care providers, others assisting with my health care<br>and my family, in the event I cannot make and communicate decisions for myself.AND/ORPART III: Allows me to make an organ and tissue donation upon my death by signing adocument of anatomical gift.PART I: APPOINTMENT OF HEALTH CARE AGENTTHIS IS WHO I WANT TO MAKE HEALTH CARE DECISIONSFOR ME IF I AM UNABLE TO MAKE AND COMMUNICATEPage No. 7HEALTH CARE DECISIONS FOR MYSELF(I know I can change my agent or alternate agent at any timeand I know I do not have to appoint an agent or an alternate agent)NOTE: If you appoint an agent, you should discuss this health care directive with youragent and give your agent a copy. If you do not wish to appoint an agent, you may leave Part I<br>blank and go to Part II and/or Part III. None of the following may be designated as your agent:<br>your treating health care provider, a nonrelative employee of your treating health care provider,<br>an operator of a long-term care facility, or a nonrelative employee of a long-term care facility.When I am unable to make and communicate health care decisions for myself, I trust andappoint______________________________ to make health care decisions for me. This person<br>is called my health care agent.Relationship of my health care agent to me: _________________________________Telephone number of my health care agent: _________________________________Address of my health care agent: __________________________________________(OPTIONAL) APPOINTMENT OF ALTERNATE HEALTH CARE AGENT: If myhealth care agent is not reasonably available, I trust and appoint _____________________to be my health care agent instead.Relationship of my alternate health care agent to me: ________________________Telephone number of my alternate health care agent: ________________________Address of my alternate health care agent: _________________________________THIS IS WHAT I WANT MY HEALTH CARE AGENT TO BE ABLE TO DOIF I AM UNABLE TO MAKE AND COMMUNICATE HEALTH CARE DECISIONSFOR MYSELF(I know I can change these choices)My health care agent is automatically given the powers listed below in (A) through (D).My health care agent must follow my health care instructions in this document or any other<br>instructions I have given to my agent. If I have not given health care instructions, then my agent<br>must act in my best interest.Whenever I am unable to make and communicate health care decisions for myself, myhealth care agent has the power to:(A) Make any health care decision for me. This includes the power to give, refuse, orwithdraw consent to any care, treatment, service, or procedures. This includes deciding whether<br>to stop or not start health care that is keeping me or might keep me alive and deciding about<br>mental health treatment.(B) Choose my health care providers.(C) Choose where I live and receive care and support when those choices relate to myhealth care needs.(D) Review my medical records and have the same rights that I would have to give mymedical records to other people.If I DO NOT want my health care agent to have a power listed above in (A) through (D)OR if I want to LIMIT any power in (A) through (D), I MUST say that here:Page No. 8____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________My health care agent is NOT automatically given the powers listed below in (1) and (2). IfI WANT my agent to have any of the powers in (1) and (2), I must INITIAL the line in front of the<br>power; then my agent WILL HAVE that power.____(1) To decide whether to donate any parts of my body, including organs, tissues, andeyes, when I die.____(2) To decide what will happen with my body when I die (burial, cremation).If I want to say anything more about my health care agent's powers or limits on thepowers, I can say it here:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________PART II: HEALTH CARE INSTRUCTIONSNOTE: Complete this Part II if you wish to give health care instructions. If you appointedan agent in Part I, completing this Part II is optional but would be very helpful to your agent.<br>However, if you chose not to appoint an agent in Part I, you MUST complete, at a minimum, Part<br>II (B) if you wish to make a valid health care directive.These are instructions for my health care when I am unable to make and communicatehealth care decisions for myself. These instructions must be followed (so long as they address<br>my needs).(A) THESE ARE MY BELIEFS AND VALUES ABOUT MY HEALTH CARE(I know I can change these choices or leave any of them blank)I want you to know these things about me to help you make decisions about my healthcare:My goals for my health care:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________My fears about my health care:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________My spiritual or religious beliefs and traditions:____________________________________________________________________________Page No. 9________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________My beliefs about when life would be no longer worth living:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________My thoughts about how my medical condition might affect my family:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________(B) THIS IS WHAT I WANT AND DO NOT WANT FOR MY HEALTH CARE(I know I can change these choices or leave any of them blank)Many medical treatments may be used to try to improve my medical condition or toprolong my life. Examples include artificial breathing by a machine connected to a tube in the<br>lungs, artificial feeding or fluids through tubes, attempts to start a stopped heart, surgeries,<br>dialysis, antibiotics, and blood transfusions. Most medical treatments can be tried for a while and<br>then stopped if they do not help.I have these views about my health care in these situations:(Note: You can discuss general feelings, specific treatments, or leave any of them blank).If I had a reasonable chance of recovery and were temporarily unable to make andcommunicate health care decisions for myself, I would want:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________If I were dying and unable to make and communicate health care decisions for myself, Iwould want:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________If I were permanently unconscious and unable to make and communicate health caredecisions for myself, I would want:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Page No. 10If I were completely dependent on others for my care and unable to make andcommunicate health care decisions for myself, I would want:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________In all circumstances, my doctors will try to keep me comfortable and reduce my pain.This is how I feel about pain relief if it would affect my alertness or if it could shorten my life:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________There are other things that I want or do not want for my health care, if possible:Who I would like to be my doctor:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Where I would like to live to receive health care:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Where I would like to die and other wishes I have about dying:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________My wishes about what happens to my body when I die (cremation, burial):____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Any other things:____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Page No. 11PART III: MAKING AN ANATOMICAL GIFTI would like to be an organ donor at the time of my death. I have told my family mydecision and ask my family to honor my wishes.I wish to donate the following (initial onestatement):[ ]Any needed organs and tissue.[ ]Only the following organs and tissue:___________________________PART IV: MAKING THE DOCUMENT LEGALPRIOR DESIGNATIONS REVOKED. I revoke any prior health care directive.DATE AND SIGNATURE OF PRINCIPAL(YOU MUST DATE AND SIGN THIS HEALTH CARE DIRECTIVE)I sign my name to this Health Care Directive Form on_____________ at(date)_______________________________________(city)________________________________________(state)________________________________________________(you sign here)(THIS HEALTH CARE DIRECTIVE WILL NOT BE VALID UNLESS IT IS NOTARIZED OR<br>SIGNED BY TWO QUALIFIED WITNESSES WHO ARE PRESENT WHEN YOU SIGN OR<br>ACKNOWLEDGE YOUR SIGNATURE. IF YOU HAVE ATTACHED ANY ADDITIONAL PAGES<br>TO THIS FORM, YOU MUST DATE AND SIGN EACH OF THE ADDITIONAL PAGES AT THE<br>SAME TIME YOU DATE AND SIGN THIS HEALTH CARE DIRECTIVE.)NOTARY PUBLIC OR STATEMENT OF WITNESSESThis document must be (1) notarized or (2) witnessed by two qualified adult witnesses. The<br>person notarizing this document may be an employee of a health care or long-term care provider<br>providing your care. At least one witness to the execution of the document must not be a health<br>care or long-term care provider providing you with direct care or an employee of the health care<br>or long-term care provider providing you with direct care. None of the following may be used as<br>a notary or witness:1.A person you designate as your agent or alternate agent;2.Your spouse;3.A person related to you by blood, marriage, or adoption;4.A person entitled to inherit any part of your estate upon your death; or5.A person who has, at the time of executing this document, any claim against your<br>estate.Option 1: Notary PublicState of ____________County of ____________In my presence on __________ (date), ________________ (name of declarant) acknowledged<br>the declarant's signature on this document or acknowledged that the declarant directed the<br>person signing this document to sign on the declarant's behalf.Page No. 12_________________________(Signature of Notary Public)My commission expires __________________________ , 20__.Option 2: Two WitnessesWitness One:(1)In my presence on _________ (date), _____________________ (name of<br>declarant) acknowledged the declarant's signature on this document or<br>acknowledged that the declarant directed the person signing this document to<br>sign on the declarant's behalf.(2)I am at least eighteen years of age.(3)If I am a health care provider or an employee of a health care provider giving<br>direct care to the declarant, I must initial this box: [ ].I certify that the information in (1) through (3) is true and correct._________________________(Signature of Witness One)_________________________(Address)Witness Two:(1)In my presence on__________(date), ___________________ (name of<br>declarant) acknowledged the declarant's signature on this document or<br>acknowledged that the declarant directed the person signing this document to<br>sign on the declarant's behalf.(2)I am at least eighteen years of age.(3)If I am a health care provider or an employee of a health care provider giving<br>direct care to the declarant, I must initial this box: [ ].I certify that the information in (1) through (3) is true and correct._________________________(Signature of Witness Two)_________________________(Address)ACCEPTANCE OF APPOINTMENT OF POWER OF ATTORNEY. I accept this appointment<br>and agree to serve as agent for health care decisions.I understand I have a duty to actconsistently with the desires of the principal as expressed in this appointment. I understand that<br>this document gives me authority over health care decisions for the principal only if the principal<br>becomes incapacitated. I understand that I must act in good faith in exercising my authority<br>under this power of attorney. I understand that the principal may revoke this power of attorney at<br>any time in any manner.Page No. 13If I choose to withdraw during the time the principal is competent, I must notify theprincipal of my decision. If I choose to withdraw when the principal is not able to make health<br>care decisions, I must notify the principal's physician.___________________________________<br>(Signature of agent/date)<br>___________________________________<br>(Signature of alternate agent/date)PRINCIPAL'S STATEMENTI have read a written explanation of the nature and effect of an appointment of a healthcare agent that is attached to my health care directive.Dated this _____ day of ________ , 20 _____. _______________________(Signature of Principal)23-06.5-18. Penalties.1.A person who, without authorization of the principal, willfully alters or forges a health<br>care directive or willfully conceals or destroys a revocation with the intent and effect<br>of causing a withholding or withdrawal of life-sustaining procedures which hastens<br>the death of the principal is guilty of a class C felony.2.A person who, without authorization of the principal, willfully alters, forges, conceals,<br>or destroys a health care directive or willfully alters or forges a revocation of a health<br>care directive is guilty of a class A misdemeanor.3.The penalties provided in this section do not preclude application of any other<br>penalties provided by law.23-06.5-19. Health care record registry - Fees.1.As used in this section:a.&quot;Health care record&quot; means a health care directive or a revocation of a health<br>care directive executed in accordance with this chapter.b.&quot;Registration form&quot; means a form prescribed by the secretary of state to<br>facilitate the filing of a health care record.2.a.The secretary of state may establish and maintain a health care record registry,<br>through which a health care record may be filed.The registry must beaccessible through a website maintained by the secretary of state.b.An individual who is the subject of a health care record, or that individual's<br>agent, may submit to the secretary of state for registration, using a registration<br>form, a health care record executed in accordance with this chapter.3.Failure to register a health care record with the secretary of state under this section<br>does not affect the validity of the health care record. Failure to notify the secretary of<br>state of the revocation of a health care record filed under this section does not affect<br>the validity of a revocation that otherwise meets the statutory requirements for<br>revocation.4.a.Upon receipt of a health care record and completed registration form, the<br>secretary of state shall create a digital reproduction of the health care record,<br>enter the reproduced health care record into the health care record registry<br>database, and assign each registration a unique file number. The secretary of<br>state is not required to review a health care record to ensure the health carePage No. 14record complies with any particular statutory requirements that may apply to the<br>health care record.b.The secretary of state shall delete a health care record filed with the registry<br>under this section upon receipt of a revocation of the health care record along<br>with that document's file number.c.The entry of a health care record under this section does not affect or otherwise<br>create a presumption regarding the validity of the health care record or the<br>accuracy of the information contained in the health care record.5.a.The registry must be accessible by entering the file number and password on<br>the internet website. Registration forms, file numbers, and other information<br>maintained by the secretary of state under this section are confidential and the<br>state may not disclose this information to any person other than the subject of<br>the document, or the subject's agent.The secretary of state may not useinformation contained in the registry except as provided under this chapter.b.At the request of the subject of the health care record, or the subject's agent,<br>the secretary of state may transmit the information received regarding the<br>health care record to the registry system of another jurisdiction as identified by<br>the requester.c.This section does not require a health care provider to seek to access registry<br>information about whether a patient has executed a health care record that may<br>be registered under this section. A health care provider who makes good-faith<br>health care decisions in reliance on the provisions of an apparently genuine<br>health care record received from the registry is immune from criminal and civil<br>liability to the same extent and under the same conditions as prescribed in<br>section 23-06.5-12.This section does not affect the duty of a health careprovider to provide information to a patient regarding health care directives as<br>may be required under federal law.6.The secretary of state may accept a gift, grant, donation, bequest, or other form of<br>voluntary contribution to establish, support, promote, and maintain the registry. Any<br>funds contributed under this subsection and any fees collected under this section<br>must be deposited in the secretary of state's general services operating fund. The<br>secretary of state shall charge and collect a reasonable fee for filing a health care<br>record and a revocation of a health care record.Page No. 15Document Outlinechapter 23-06.5 health care directives