Oklahoma's
Advance Directive for Health Care allows you, if you are 18 years
of age or older, to inform physicians and others of your wishes to
provide, decline or withdraw life-sustaining medical care and to
donate specified organs when you have been diagnosed by your attending
physician and another physician to be in a terminal condition, a
persistently unconscious state, or an end-stage condition. The Advance
Directive also allows you to appoint a Health Care Proxy to make
certain decisions on your behalf.
If you have completed an Advance Directive and been
diagnosed as terminally ill or persistently unconscious by two physicians
as defined in the Advance Directive and your attending physician
does not want to comply with your wishes, that physician must act
promptly to arrange for your care by another physician or health
care provider.
After you complete an Advance Directive, you may revoke it in whole or in part at any time and in any manner, without regard to your mental or physical condition. A revocation is effective upon your communication to your attending physician or other care provider or a witness to the revocation.
Make copies of your Advance Directive for your personal records, your family, your physician, your attorney, your Health Care Proxy and alternate Health Care Proxy. If your physician is unwilling to comply with the Advance Directive, the physician must tell you.
If you signed a Directive to Physicians or other
Advance Directive for Health Care under Oklahoma law prior to 2006,
it is recommended that you complete the new Advance Directive because
of additional options under the existing law.
Frequently Asked Questions
|