South Florida's Premier Estate Planning Attorneys - Trusted By Generations of Floridians℠ - Since 1978

Healthcare Directive Attorney Boca Raton | Living Will & Healthcare Surrogate | Florida Wills & Trusts

Healthcare Directives in Florida

Make your medical wishes known before a crisis occurs. Healthcare directives ensure your treatment preferences are followed and designate someone you trust to speak for you when you can't.

Board Certified
Included in Every Plan
Florida-Compliant

Schedule a Consultation

Create healthcare directives as part of your complete estate plan.

Schedule Consultation
Serving Palm Beach, Broward & Miami-Dade
Florida Bar Board Certified
Flat-Fee Pricing

Make Your Medical Wishes Known

Healthcare directives are legal documents that communicate your medical treatment preferences and designate someone to make healthcare decisions on your behalf when you cannot. They ensure your wishes are respected during a medical crisis—and spare your family the burden of guessing what you would have wanted.

In Florida, healthcare directives typically include three documents: a living will (stating your end-of-life treatment preferences), a healthcare surrogate designation (naming someone to make medical decisions for you), and a HIPAA authorization (allowing designated people to access your medical information).

Healthcare directives are different from a power of attorney. A POA handles financial matters; healthcare directives handle medical decisions. You need both.

Without healthcare directives, your family may face agonizing decisions without guidance—or may not legally be able to make decisions at all. Hospitals may require court involvement to determine who can authorize treatment. These delays occur at the worst possible time, when your family is already under enormous stress.

We include healthcare directives in every estate plan we create. They're not optional extras—they're essential protection for you and your family, regardless of your age or current health.

Healthcare Documents Included

  • Living will / advance directive
  • Healthcare surrogate designation
  • HIPAA authorization
  • Anatomical gift declaration (optional)

"My mother had a stroke and we were so grateful her healthcare directive was in place. The hospital knew exactly what she wanted, and I could make decisions without second-guessing myself."

Jennifer M., Boca Raton

The Three Essential Documents

Each healthcare document serves a distinct purpose. Together, they provide comprehensive protection.

Living Will

States your wishes regarding end-of-life medical treatment. Specifically addresses whether you want life-prolonging procedures if you have a terminal condition, end-stage condition, or are in a persistent vegetative state.

  • End-of-life treatment preferences
  • Guidance for your healthcare surrogate
  • Relieves family of difficult decisions

Healthcare Surrogate

Designates a trusted person to make medical decisions for you when you cannot make them yourself—whether due to unconsciousness, sedation, dementia, or any incapacitating condition.

  • Names your medical decision-maker
  • Covers situations living will doesn't address
  • Can name alternates if first choice unavailable

HIPAA Authorization

Authorizes healthcare providers to share your medical information with designated family members or representatives. Without this, HIPAA privacy laws may prevent your family from getting information about your condition.

  • Allows access to medical records
  • Permits discussion with doctors
  • Essential for informed decision-making

Why Healthcare Directives Matter

These documents protect you and relieve your family during the most difficult times.

Your Wishes Are Followed

You decide what medical treatment you want or don't want—not doctors, hospitals, or family members who may disagree. Your values and preferences guide your care.

Family Burden Reduced

Your family won't have to guess what you would have wanted. They can focus on being with you rather than agonizing over impossible decisions without guidance.

No Delays in Treatment

Hospitals know immediately who can authorize treatment. No waiting for court orders or family disputes to be resolved while critical time passes.

Family Conflict Avoided

When your wishes are documented, there's no room for family members to argue about what you "would have wanted." Your directive settles the question.

Choosing Your Healthcare Surrogate

Your healthcare surrogate is the person who will make medical decisions for you when you cannot. This is one of the most important choices you'll make in your estate planning.

Choose someone who understands your values and will honor them—even if they personally disagree. This person needs to be able to make difficult decisions under pressure and advocate for your wishes with medical professionals.

We recommend having a conversation with your chosen surrogate about your values and preferences. What matters most to you? What would be unacceptable? The more your surrogate understands your thinking, the better they can represent your wishes in situations your documents don't specifically address.

You can name alternate surrogates in case your first choice is unavailable when needed. This provides backup protection without the complications of having multiple people share authority.

Your Surrogate Should Be

  • Someone who understands and respects your values
  • Willing to advocate for your wishes even under pressure
  • Able to make difficult decisions during emotional times
  • Geographically available to be present when needed
  • At least 18 years old and of sound mind

Common Questions About Healthcare Directives

Answers to questions we hear most often from South Florida families.

A living will states your wishes about end-of-life medical treatment—specifically whether you want life-prolonging procedures if you have a terminal condition or are in a permanent vegetative state. A healthcare surrogate designates a person to make medical decisions for you when you cannot. You need both: the living will provides guidance, and the surrogate makes decisions in situations your living will doesn't cover.
Your healthcare surrogate can make decisions whenever you are unable to make them yourself—whether due to unconsciousness, sedation, dementia, or any condition that impairs your decision-making capacity. Your physician determines when you lack capacity. The surrogate's authority ends when you regain capacity.
No. Your surrogate must follow the wishes expressed in your living will. The surrogate's role is to make decisions in situations your living will doesn't address, or to interpret your wishes when circumstances are ambiguous. A good healthcare surrogate is someone who understands your values and will honor them.
Florida law doesn't require an attorney for healthcare directives, but having them prepared professionally ensures they meet all legal requirements and are coordinated with your overall estate plan. We include healthcare directives in every estate plan we create—they're essential documents, not optional extras. They're prepared together with your will, trust, and power of attorney as part of a comprehensive package.
HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) restricts who can access your medical information. A HIPAA authorization allows your designated representatives to communicate with your doctors and access your medical records. Without it, healthcare providers may refuse to share information with family members—even your spouse—creating obstacles during medical emergencies.
Yes. You can revoke or change your healthcare directives at any time while you have mental capacity. You can revoke them orally, in writing, or by creating new documents. We recommend reviewing your healthcare directives periodically and updating them if your wishes, circumstances, or chosen surrogate changes.

Protect Your Healthcare Wishes

Don't leave critical medical decisions to chance. Create healthcare directives that ensure your wishes are followed and your family is protected during difficult times.

Schedule Consultation