[WSBAPT] Advance Directives - Obligations of health care providers

John J. Sullivan sullaw at comcast.net
Wed Oct 21 20:09:18 PDT 2015


This is why I always couple a Directive with a Health Care Power of Attorney - so there is a human advocate and not just a piece of paper. 

We used to run into reluctant care providers in decades past. These days it's more an enthusiasm that's the concern. 

I had to be the decision maker regarding when to withdraw care for a client a few years ago. Never again. 

John Sullivan

Sent from my iPhone

> On Oct 21, 2015, at 1:01 PM, Eric Reutter <hobbes8813 at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Hello and good afternoon,
> 
> I am a UW Tax LLM student interested in Estate Planning. I have a question related to a basic article about Advance Directives that I am currently drafting. I have combed through the relevant RCW and WAC sections, but I believe that my question is one that requires practice experience to answer.
> 
> I have encountered what, in my opinion seems to be some gray-area in Washington law regarding health care provider's responsibilities under Advance Directives. While I understand that the Natural Death Act explicitly permits health care providers to decline to participate in withholding life-sustaining treatment, and that they are then required to inform the patient of any such conflicting policies (RCW 70.122.060), I am less clear regarding their responsibilities if they choose not to honor the applicable advance directive when their patient is both incapacitated and without a health care agent or guardian.
> 
> I understand that WAC 182-501-0125 requires health care providers to "Make a good faith effort to transfer the client to another health care practitioner who will honor the directive if the client chooses not to retain the facility or organization." But I am trying to understand the obligations (if any) of the health care provider when the patient is permanently unconscious and does not have a health care agent or a guardian appointed.
> 
> My ultimate question is, in this circumstance, would a health care provider still have an obligation to make a good-faith effort to transfer a patient to a health care practitioner who will honor the directive?
> 
> My hunch is that, if a health care facility were in this situation and refusing to honor the directive, a patient's family or friend could petition for guardianship of the patient, and then have the power to move them to a different facility that would honor the advance directive. If the patient did not have such a guardian step in, however, I cannot envision how the health care facility would be under any legal obligation to transfer the patient, unless WAC 182-501-0125(6)(d) were to be interpreted quite broadly by a court. 
> 
> I am curious if I am understanding the legal obligations (or lack thereof) of a health care provider in this situation. Any thoughts would be greatly appreciated. 
> 
> Eric Reutter
> Tax LLM Candidate 2016
> University of Washington School of Law
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