Blog Author: Stephen C. Hartnett, J.D., LL.M. (Tax), Director of Education,
American Academy of Estate Planning Attorneys, Inc.
In the United States alone, the pandemic has infected nearly 8.5 million people and has killed nearly 227,000 of them. In today’s pandemic, it’s more important than ever to make sure your estate planning documents are current. It’s especially important to ensure your documents relating to your health are up-to-date. Those documents are the Health Care Power of Attorney, the Advance Directive, and the HIPAA Power.
In the Health Care Power of Attorney you appoint an “Agent” to make health decisions for you when you’re not able to make those decisions for yourself. You can also appoint a successor Agent to make decisions if the first Agent is not available or isn’t able. You can appoint additional successors, too.
An Advance Directive expresses your wishes regarding end-of-life decisions. Without such a clear expression of your wishes, you must be kept alive even if you have no reasonable chance of recovery, even if doing so would prolong your suffering. Sometimes an Advance Directive is called a “Living Will” and often it is combined into the same document as the Health Care Power of Attorney.
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 mandates healthcare providers keep your protected health information confidential. While this is primarily a good thing, sometimes you want some people to have access to your protected health information. For example, you want your Health Care Agent to have access to your information so they can make informed decisions regarding your health. Also, you want fiduciaries such as the Agent under a Financial Power of Attorney and the successor Trustee of your Trust to be able to have access so they can know if they need to step in to manage your financial affairs, which is their duty. A HIPAA Power grants access to your protected health information to those whom you designate. In fact, without such a power, your loved ones might not even know you’re in the ICU with COVID-19.
It’s important to have these three documents, but it’s also important to keep them up-to-date and to name successors in them. All too often in the current pandemic, the illness impacts more than one person in the family or locality. If there’s no successor appointed (or that successor is also incapacitated) there can be delays in getting consents for different treatments or implementing end-of-life decisions.
Today’s pandemic is hard on all of us. Precautions like washing your hands, social distancing, and wearing a mask can make all of us safer. Keeping your estate planning documents up-to-date helps ensure that, if the precautions don’t work, your loved ones and fiduciaries can help you through the illness and make it easier for you and your loved ones.
Litherland, Kennedy & Associates, APC, Attorneys at Law are members of the American Academy of Estate Planning Attorneys. If you would like to learn more about the importance of estate planning, we invite you to attend one of our free estate planning webinars. In addition to offering free estate planning webinars, we offer Zoom and Phone Consultations.