LeadingAge New York Adviser Winter Vol. 1 | Page 47

Family gatherings can be turned into opportunities to improve understanding of the role of advanced care planning, here are some tips for making conversations about future health care needs easier. Start with a story of someone else’s experience. An anecdote about what happened to someone else is a safe way to dip a toe into potentially tumultuous conversational waters. Illustrating what could go wrong (or right) in a critical healthcare situation can be a useful segue to talk about your own expectations. Express your gratitude. Give thanks for the good things in life and celebrate friends, family and connection. Use this time to express your values, priorities, and what you feel comprises quality of life. Tell your loved ones what you value most about your physical, mental and/or spiritual well-being. Pick a quarterback. Just as your favorite team needs a quarterback to advance the ball, you will need to designate someone you trust to act as your health care agent or proxy. This is the person best suited to speak for you in a medical crisis in the event that you are unable to speak for yourself. Although there may be many members on the team, it is important to have one person who calls the plays. The person you choose should be able to make decisions that are in keeping with your values wishes and choices. Blame the lawyers. If your family is not quite comfortable with sharing feelings, this strategy might work well for you. In fact, most estate attorneys and family law advocates strongly encourage their clients to execute a health care proxy and living will. Make it a family affair. Many hospices make available health care proxy forms that are the size of a place card, designed to fit in one’s wallet. Use these to designate holiday seating arrangements and have the whole table fill them out together. You can always (ex)change it. Don’t worry that this is carved in stone; Just as your hairstyle might change as you age, so might your preferences. Your first living will might state that you want all care focused on sustaining your life and at some point later in your life you might change your mind. Later on you might decide your priority is to try life-extending treatment for a period of time and then transition to a focus on comfort care. And at some point, you may or may not choose strictly comfort care, like hospice, to allow for a natural death in the setting of your choice with friends and family around you. Therefore, as your preferences change, you may update your documents as you so choose- and make sure your health care proxy knows what you want. Give a gift. Although it may feel awkward to initiate such a discussion with your loved ones, think of it as a gift that you are giving, both to yourself and to your family. Without an advance directive, friends and family struggle with the moral burden of complicated medical decision-making in a time of crisis. By making your health care preferences known and documented, you are giving a gift to your loved ones – the certainty that they are following your wishes. For more information on advance care planning, please visit www.hpcanys.org/community-resources/advanced-directives leadingageny.org 46