Episodes

  • When Life Changes: Revoking Power of Attorney in Texas | S3EP64
    Mar 24 2026
    Episode Summary: When life changes, moving, marriage, or shifting relationships, you may want to change who can make decisions for you. In this episode of Thoughtful Planning, Honey and Santiago explain how to revoke a Medical Power of Attorney or a Texas Statutory Durable Power of Attorney (Financial POA). They cover what revocation means, how the eFileTexas guided tool works, why notarizing helps, and how to make sure the revocation is actually honored. Essential Question: If you signed a Medical Power of Attorney or a Statutory Durable Power of Attorney and you want to revoke it, what steps help make sure your revocation is clear and actually honored? Episode Highlights: [00:00] When life changes and you want to update your decision-maker [00:44] Today’s topic: revoking medical POA or financial POA in Texas [01:07] Disclaimer and Texas-based context [02:15] Today’s essential question [02:40] What revoking a POA means, canceling your agent’s authority [03:26] Written revocation is not always required, but often recommended [03:42] Why notarizing helps with banks and businesses [04:05] Using the free eFileTexas revocation tool [04:30] What info the interview asks for [05:49] Sign in front of a notary and keep your signed copy [06:04] The step people miss: deliver copies and update records [06:20] Who to notify for Financial POA revocation [07:27] Who to notify for Medical POA revocation [08:28] Before you revoke, consider a replacement agent [09:01] Medical POA vs HIPAA authorization, separate documents [10:12] Final recap: revoke it, then make sure the right people know Takeaways: • Revoking a POA cancels your agent’s authority, but it only protects you if the right people and institutions are aware it has changed. • A written revocation creates a clearer paper trail, and notarizing it can help institutions take it seriously. • After revocation, give copies to your former agent and any places that relied on the old document. • For medical decisions, make sure your doctor and healthcare providers update what they have on file. • HIPAA authorization is separate from a Medical Power of Attorney, and revoking generally must be done in writing. Action Steps: Decide whether you are revoking your Medical POA, Financial POA, or both. Use the eFileTexas guided interview or a written revocation for a clear paper trail. Sign the revocation in front of a notary public. Deliver copies to your former agent and any institutions or providers that relied on the old document. Keep a list of who received copies and when. If needed, complete new documents to name a replacement agent. Resources (If a link breaks, search by name): TexasLawHelp.org Powers of Attorney Fact Sheet https://texaslawhelp.org/article/powers-of-attorney-fact-sheet TexasLawHelp.org Medical Power of Attorney https://texaslawhelp.org/article/medical-power-of-attorney eFileTexas Guided Interview https://texas.tylertech.cloud/SRL/SRL/ExecuteInterview HHS HIPAA FAQ: Can an individual revoke an authorization? https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/faq/474/can-an-individual-revoke-his-or-her-authorization/index.html Episode 61 (YouTube): HIPAA & Your Teen https://youtu.be/UYZsMcGL1JM Next Episode: Continuing our foundational planning documents series Questions? info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer: We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. This content is for educational purposes only. Laws vary by state and can change. Please consult an estate planning attorney for legal guidance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    12 mins
  • Parents + 18-Year-Olds: The “Just-in-Case” Form for Money Emergencies | S3EP63
    Mar 10 2026
    Episode Summary: When a young adult turns 18, parents no longer automatically have access to their child’s finances. That can create problems during emergencies, especially if money needs to be moved, bills need to be paid, or accounts need attention while the young adult is unavailable. In this episode of Thoughtful Planning, Honey and Santiago explain the Texas Statutory Durable Power of Attorney (Financial POA). They discuss what the document does, why a young adult might want one, how it works, and how to complete the Texas form. Essential Question: What is a financial power of attorney, why might a young adult in Texas want one, and how do you complete it? Episode Highlights: [00:00] A college emergency scenario many families don’t expect [00:30] Introducing the Statutory Durable Power of Attorney (Financial POA) [00:50] Welcome to Thoughtful Planning and who we are [01:07] Disclaimer and Texas-based context [02:15] Today’s essential question [02:40] What a power of attorney means in simple terms [03:00] What “durable” means [03:38] Financial POA vs medical POA [03:55] Principal, agent, and alternate agent explained [04:25] Why co-agents can complicate things [05:24] What changes when a teen turns 18 [05:56] Real situations where a financial POA helps [06:36] Important reminder: the young adult keeps control [06:55] Types of financial powers in the form [08:22] Banking and financial institution transactions [08:38] Business transactions and side hustles [09:40] Personal and family maintenance expenses [10:45] Digital assets and online accounts [11:02] Compensation, gifts, and special instructions [12:44] When the POA becomes effective [14:07] Choosing a trustworthy agent [15:11] Legal responsibilities of the agent [15:58] Where to find the Texas forms [16:26] Using the eFileTexas guided interview [16:56] Signing the document with a notary [17:48] Why banks may require additional steps [18:22] Asking your bank about Payable on Death (POD) [19:27] Revoking a financial POA if needed [19:43] Final recap Takeaways: • A Financial POA allows someone you trust to handle financial matters on your behalf. • “Durable” means the document can still work if you become unable to manage your finances. • A young adult keeps full control; the document simply creates a backup. • Banks and financial institutions may have their own procedures for accepting a POA. • Choosing the right agent is critical because they may act in your name. Action Steps: Talk with your young adult about financial emergencies before they turn 18. Decide who they trust to act as their financial agent. Review the powers in the form and select only what makes sense. Sign the document in front of a notary public. Ask your bank what they require to keep a POA on file. Resources (If a link breaks, search by name): Texas HHS Advance Directives PDF https://www.hhs.texas.gov/formas/advance-directives eFileTexas Guided Interview https://texas.tylertech.cloud/SRL/SRL/ExecuteInterview TexasLawHelp — Powers of Attorney https://texaslawhelp.org/article/powers-of-attorney TexasLawHelp — Property Deed Basics https://texaslawhelp.org/article/property-deed-basics Next Episode: How to Revoke a Power of Attorney Questions? info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer: We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. This content is for educational purposes only. Laws vary by state and can change. Please consult an estate planning attorney for legal guidance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    21 mins
  • Turning 18? Health Forms to Consider for Families (Recap + Updates) | S3EP62
    Feb 24 2026
    Episode Summary: If your teen is about to turn 18, common checklists may miss key details. In this recap of Thoughtful Planning, Honey and Santiago review essential health related forms discussed in Episodes 56 to 61 and share new updates for families, including hospital paperwork realities, serious illness orders, state by state differences, and a VA form veterans should know. Essential Question: What health related forms have we discussed, and what new information have we learned that families should be aware of? Episode Highlights: [00:00] Turning 18 checklists and what they miss [00:24] Welcome and disclaimer (Texas focused, laws vary) [02:42] Recap: Living Will, Medical POA, HIPAA [03:48] Update: agent and witness rules matter [05:07] Mental health directive and dementia planning (Ep 33) [06:08] Organ, brain, body donation choices and planning steps [09:36] Hospitals may request their own forms [10:02] Bring copies and confirm documents are on file [11:14] Serious illness forms: Out of Hospital DNR and POLST/MOLST [12:50] Some states require extra steps for agents [15:13] Veterans: VA Form 21-0845 for VA information access [16:20] Recap, subscribe, and what is next Takeaways: ✅ The big three health forms: Living Will, Medical POA, HIPAA Authorization ✅ HIPAA gives permission to share info; POA gives decision making authority ✅ Some forms apply mainly in serious illness (OOH DNR, POLST/MOLST) ✅ Hospitals may want their own paperwork, always bring copies ✅ Laws vary by state and can change, verify current rules ✅ Veterans may need VA Form 21-0845 for VA information access Action Steps: 1️⃣ Talk with your teen before they turn 18 (expectations and trust) 2️⃣ Review your state’s requirements (agent and witness rules matter) 3️⃣ Complete and share the big three forms with trusted people and providers 4️⃣ Ask hospitals and clinics if they require facility specific paperwork 5️⃣ Create a document inventory and review yearly or after life changes 6️⃣ Veterans: look into VA Form 21-0845 if someone needs VA access Resources (If a link breaks, search by name): 🔹 Episode 56: Living Will Preparation (Part 1) https://youtu.be/sq7asB8MhUM 🔹 Episode 57: Living Will Addendums (Part 2) https://youtu.be/Hw-oSJE5RRA 🔹 Episode 58: Completing the Directive (Part 3) https://youtu.be/SyG76P_BfXQ 🔹 Episode 59: Choosing a Medical POA Agent https://youtu.be/qGR1i4I6Ujs 🔹 Episode 60: When They Turn 18: A Parent’s Legal Wake Up Call https://youtu.be/CLEiiwXSWu4 🔹 Episode 61: HIPAA and Your Teen https://youtu.be/UYZsMcGL1JM 🔹 Episode 33: Planning for Dementia and Mental Health https://youtu.be/iwsDXi42jFU?si=m8Ko4Kx5ImClnF5u 🔹 Episode 9: National Donor Day https://youtu.be/Br6EfLJCX7U 🔹 Episode 42: Understanding Brain Donation https://youtu.be/upjYh-FOYu8🔹 Texas Advance Directives (HHS) https://www.hhs.texas.gov/formas/advance-directives 🔹 eFileTexas (forms) https://texas.tylertech.cloud/SRL/srl/ExecuteInterview 🔹 VA Form 21-0845 (Authorization to Disclose to a Third Party): search “VA 21-0845” Next Episode:🎧 Statutory Durable Power of Attorney (financial planning) Questions?📧 info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer:We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. Educational only. Texas focused. Consult an estate planning attorney for your state. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    20 mins
  • HIPAA & Your Teen: The Form That Could Save Time, Tears & Trouble | S3EP61
    Feb 10 2026
    Episode Summary: When a child turns 18, parents lose the legal right to access their medical information, even in an emergency. In this episode of Thoughtful Planning, we reveal why a HIPAA Authorization Form is the missing piece in many families’ planning toolkits. We unpack the difference between this form and a Medical Power of Attorney, share two trusted options in Texas, and explain how to avoid being shut out when your child needs you most. Essential Question:Why does a person need a HIPAA form if they already have a medical power of attorney and living will? Episode Highlights: [00:00] Facebook post that inspired this episode [00:27] A parent’s worst fear: being left in the dark [01:07] The legal wall that appears at age 18 [01:16] Today’s essential question [01:30] Meet Santiago & Honey [01:53] Recap: Living Will + Medical POA (Episodes 56–60) [02:05] HIPAA’s role: the “eyes” of the plan [02:45] Common confusion: power of attorney ≠ access [03:40] How HIPAA helps during “gray zone” moments [04:30] Emergency scenarios with conscious adult children [05:20] Why some hospitals play it safe and say nothing [06:15] HIPAA form = clear permission [06:40] Two HIPAA form options in Texas [06:55] Option 1: eFileTexas form – simple but broad [07:38] Option 2: Authorization to Disclose Protected Health Information offered by the Texas AG HB300 – more control [08:10] Sensitive data & time limits with checkboxes [08:55] Notary vs no notary: what’s recommended [09:44] Revoking a HIPAA form: how to do it right [10:46] Updating and replacing forms [11:18] Pro tips: blue pens, glove box storage, labeling [12:12] College-bound kids: who needs copies? [13:06] State-specific advice: consult the school or a local attorney [13:40] Reassurance: this is like a fire extinguisher [14:15] Boundaries & trust: kids can revoke access anytime [15:04] Final thoughts: complete your paperwork, document who has it [15:54] Share & subscribe reminders [16:46] Next time: Durable Power of Attorney (health to wealth) Takeaways: ✅ Turning 18 ends automatic parent access to medical info ✅ HIPAA authorization allows sharing, even before a crisis ✅ It complements (not replaces) a medical POA ✅ Two main form options: eFileTexas and Authorization to Disclose Protected Health Information offered by the Texas AG HB300 ✅ One is simple & broad, the other more flexible ✅ Keep it current, share it widely, and store it smartly Action Steps (see resources below): 1️⃣ Talk with your teen before they turn 18 2️⃣ Explain what a HIPAA authorization form does 3️⃣ Choose the right Texas form for your family 4️⃣ Sign with a notary if possible (recommended) 5️⃣ Share copies with medical providers & trusted people 6️⃣ Label forms clearly and store them accessibly 7️⃣ Add it to your document inventory 8️⃣ Review annually or during life changes Resources: Note: If a link breaks, search by name. 🔹 Episode 13: Planning With Clarity (Stacey Edwards)https://youtu.be/JD69gLJr0qQ 🔹Episode 56: Living Will Prep (Part 1) https://youtu.be/sq7asB8MhUM 🔹Episode 57: Addendums Explained (Part 2) https://youtu.be/Hw-oSJE5RRA 🔹Episode 58: Completing the Directive (Part 3) https://youtu.be/SyG76P_BfXQ 🔹Episode 59: Choosing a Medical POA Agent https://youtu.be/qGR1i4I6Ujs 🔹Episode 60: When They Turn 18: A Parent’s Legal Wake-Up Call https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CLEiiwXSWu4 🔹 Texas eFile HIPAA Release https://texas.tylertech.cloud/SRL/srl/ExecuteInterview 🔹 Texas Attorney General HB300 Authorization Form, Search ‘Hipaa’ & scroll down to the file labeled ‘hb300 Authorization Disclose Health Info’ https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov Next Episode:🎧 Durable Power of Attorney: Planning Beyond Healthcare Questions?📧 info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer:We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. This content is for educational purposes only. We focus on Texas law. Please consult an estate planning attorney in your state for legal guidance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    18 mins
  • When They Turn 18: A Parent’s Legal Wake-Up Call | S3EP60
    Jan 27 2026
    Episode Summary: The day your child turns 18, everything legally changes. Overnight, parents lose access to their child’s medical records, even in emergencies. In this episode, we guide parents on how to mentor their young adult through completing a Medical Power of Attorney before a crisis hits. Using the eFileTexas site, we show how this legal step becomes a milestone of independence, not panic. Essential Question: How can you guide and support your 18-year-old in completing their own medical power of attorney before a crisis occurs? Episode Highlights: [00:00] The email that locks parents out overnight [01:00] What changes at 18 [01:11] Essential question [01:17] Guest story: April Adams Pertuis [02:33] Prepare in peace time, not in crisis [02:47] What a Medical Power of Attorney does [03:05] Introductions and disclaimer [03:17] Recap: Choosing your agent (Ep. 59) [03:26] Why we focus on Texas law [04:25] Mindset shift: mentor vs manager [05:23] Explaining choice and trust [06:14] Who can be an agent (hint: not just parents) [06:20] Two ways to complete the form in Texas [06:43] Why we recommend eFileTexas [06:52] Your child needs their own login [07:16] What “Execute Interview” really means [07:49] Existing documents and cancellation [08:00] Naming agents [08:18] Understanding the “limitations” section [09:01] When to reference a living will [10:46] Disclosure statement, explained simply [11:11] When the agent’s power starts [11:38] Signing: witnesses vs notary [12:09] Why we recommend both [12:19] Blue pens, original copies [12:34] Where and how to store the document [12:57] Glove compartment strategy [13:18] Emergency access via phone [13:48] Inventory sheet: who has copies [14:24] Teaching real-world responsibility [14:45] Answering the essential question [16:21] Your task: start the conversation [17:25] Next episode preview: HIPAA and privacy [17:50] Final thoughts Takeaways: ✅ Turning 18 changes medical privacy rights ✅ A Medical POA lets your child choose their advocate ✅ Recommend parents coach, not control ✅ eFileTexas offers a user-friendly path ✅ Sign with witnesses and a notary ✅ Don’t just sign, share and store it Action Steps (see resources below): 1️⃣ Talk to your teen before they turn 18 2️⃣ Explain this is their choice, not control 3️⃣ Help them create their own eFileTexas login 4️⃣ Choose a primary and alternate agent (see Ep. 59) 5️⃣ Complete the online form 6️⃣ Sign with 2 witnesses and a notary 7️⃣ Distribute copies to doctors and agents 8️⃣ Keep an inventory log 9️⃣ Store a copy in glovebox or on phone Resources: Note: If a link breaks, search by name. Episode 13: Planning With Clarity (Stacey Edwards) https://youtu.be/JD69gLJr0qQ Episode 19: How Facing Adversity Can Fuel Your Planning (April Adams Pertuis) https://youtu.be/FKbdbbY7TxI Episode 56: Living Will Prep (Part 1) https://youtu.be/sq7asB8MhUM Episode 57: Addendums Explained (Part 2) https://youtu.be/Hw-oSJE5RRA Episode 58: Completing the Directive (Part 3) https://youtu.be/SyG76P_BfXQ Episode 59: Choosing a Medical POA Agent https://youtu.be/qGR1i4I6Ujs Texas HHS Advance Directives https://www.hhs.texas.gov/formas/advance-directives eFileTexas Self-Help Site https://texas.tylertech.cloud/SRL/SRL/ExecuteInterview Emory Critical Conditions Guide https://www.hcethics.org/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=328955&module_id=377761 Compassion & Choices Toolkit https://compassionandchoices.org/resource/eoldgt/ Next Episode: HIPAA: The Medical Privacy Form Parents Don’t Know They Need Questions? info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer: We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. This content is for educational purposes only. We focus on Texas law. Consult an estate planning attorney in your state for guidance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    18 mins
  • Who Will Speak for You? Choosing a Medical Power of Attorney | S3EP59
    Jan 13 2026
    Episode Summary: If you're in the hospital and can't speak for yourself, who makes the medical decisions? In this episode of Thoughtful Planning, Honey and Santiago explore how to choose the right Medical Power of Attorney, someone who can handle the pressure, respect your wishes, and ask the tough questions. Essential Question: How do you choose the right person to be your Medical Power of Attorney and start that conversation? Episode Highlights: [02:16] What this document is and why it matters [04:01] How to select the best person for the role [05:50] Tips to start the conversation with confidence Action Steps: ✅ Choose your medical agent and backup ✅ Talk to them about your values and wishes ✅ Write down their names and addresses ✅ Write down their names and addresses ✅ Tune in to the next episode to complete your paperwork Resources: - Caring Info: https://www.caringinfo.org/resources/?_planning_topics=communicating - The Conversation Project: https://theconversationproject.org/ Questions? info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer: We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. Everything shared is for educational purposes only. We focused on Texas laws; research the laws in your state. Consult an estate planning attorney for complex situations. 🎧 Subscribe and leave a review to help more families plan for life’s “what ifs.” #MedicalPowerOfAttorney #FamilyPlanning #ThoughtfulPlanningPodcast #HealthcareDecisions #EmergencyPlanning Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    10 mins
  • Living Will: How to Complete the Texas Directive to Physicians (Part 3 of 3) | S3EP58
    Dec 31 2025
    Episode Summary: You've done the thinking work and considered your addendums. Now it's time to complete your Texas living will and make it legally valid. Walk through the form step by step and learn how to sign, notarize, and store your document so the right people can find it when needed. Essential Question: How do you turn your medical treatment preferences into a legally valid living will? Episode Highlights: [00:00] Opening: The 20-minute project you've been putting off [00:40] Welcome and disclaimer [01:12] Essential question [01:32] Recap of episodes 56 and 57 [02:42] Two options to access the form [04:18] Walking through the eFileTexas site [05:38] Terminal and irreversible condition questions [06:33] Naming your advocate (placeholder option) [08:26] Additional requests and addendums [10:33] Legal resources [11:32] Signing: witnesses and notary [13:14] Storing your document [14:38] You can do this in under 30 minutes [15:41] Essential question answered [17:19] Next episode preview [17:37] Timing options Takeaways: ✅ If you've done the prep work, completing the form takes under 30 minutes ✅ Two options: Texas HHS PDF (skip sections) or eFileTexas (guided, but agent field mandatory) ✅ Use your own name as a placeholder if you don't know your healthcare agent yet ✅ Get both witnesses AND notary for extra validity ✅ Keep an inventory log of everyone who has copies Action Steps (links under the resource section below): Choose your method: Texas HHS PDF or eFileTexas Complete the form using your prep work from episodes 56 and 57 Reference addendums in "Additional Requests" section (if applicable) Find a notary (county offices, banks, UPS Store, neighborhood) Sign when the notary directs you with two witnesses present Distribute copies to healthcare agent, doctor, and family Keep an inventory log of who has copies Resources: Note: Links may change over time. If a link doesn't work, try searching for the resource name. Texas HHS Advance Directives (English & Spanish): https://www.hhs.texas.gov/formas/advance-directives eFileTexas Self-Help Site: https://texas.tylertech.cloud/SRL/srl/ExecuteInterview Emory Healthcare Critical Conditions Planning Guide: https://www.hcethics.org/content.aspx?page_id=22&club_id=328955&module_id=377761 Compassion & Choices Toolkit (English/Spanish): https://compassionandchoices.org/resource/eoldgt/ Episode 56 (Part 1) - Values Prep Work: https://youtu.be/sq7asB8MhUM Episode 57 (Part 2) - Addendums Explained: https://youtu.be/Hw-oSJE5RRA Texas Legal Help: Certified Lawyer Referral: https://www.texasbar.com/Content/NavigationMenu/ForThePublic/DoYouNeedaLawyer/CertifiedLawyerReferralServices1/default.htm Texas Law Help: https://texaslawhelp.org/directory Phone: (800) 252-9690 Chat: https://texaslawhelp.org/ask-a-question Walk-in clinics: https://texaslawhelp.org/legal-events-and-clinics Addendum Heading Format: "ADDENDUM TO DIRECTIVE TO PHYSICIANS AND FAMILY OR SURROGATES" Title: [Your addendum topic] This document should be read together with my Directive to Physicians and Family or Surrogates under Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 166. This addendum is intended to guide my physicians, family members, and medical decision makers in understanding my values, priorities, and preferences regarding medical treatment and end-of-life care. This document does not replace my Directive. In the event of any inconsistency, my Directive is the controlling document. Next Episode: Medical Power of Attorney: How to choose your healthcare agent and have that conversation with them. Questions? info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer: We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. Everything shared is for educational purposes only. We focused on Texas laws; research the laws in your state. Consult an estate planning attorney for complex situations. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    19 mins
  • Living Will Addendums: 4 Documents That Could Strengthen Your Advance Directive | S3EP57
    Dec 16 2025
    You've completed your living will, but what happens when your basic directive doesn't cover specific situations? Learn about four addendums that can strengthen your living will and hopefully help your wishes be honored in complex scenarios. Essential Question: What additional documents might strengthen your living will and help ensure your specific wishes are understood? Episode Highlights: [00:04] Opening scenarios [01:02] What are addendums? [03:02] Advisory vs. binding [03:41] Formatting suggestions [04:56] Personal Values & Care Preferences [05:59] Dementia Directive [06:28] Sectarian Healthcare Directive [07:18] Hospital Visitation Authorization [11:27] Next episode preview Takeaways: ✅ Addendums provide deeper context ✅ They appear advisory rather than strictly binding ✅ Medical staff reference living will first, then they might reference addendums for more information Action Steps (links under the resource section below): Download Compassion & Choices (C&C) toolkit Complete Emory Guide OR C&C Values Toolkit Select & complete relevant addendums Add suggested heading or heading advised from your attorney Use blue ink if handwriting Do NOT sign yet Resources: Emory Healthcare Critical Conditions Planning Guide (Pages 15-24): https://ethics.emory.edu/what-we-do/programs/health/critical.html Compassion & Choices (C&C) Toolkit (English/Spanish): https://compassionandchoices.org/resource/eoldgt/ Personal Values (pages 21-23 & 25-26) Dementia Directive (pages 27-32) Sectarian Healthcare Directive (page 35) Hospital Visitation Authorization (page 39) Episode 57 (Part 1): https://youtu.be/sq7asB8MhUM Episode 33 - Dementia Directives: https://youtu.be/cH9Jc_8LNlE Texas Legal Help: Certified Lawyer Referral: https://www.texasbar.com/Content/NavigationMenu/ForThePublic/DoYouNeedaLawyer/CertifiedLawyerReferralServices1/default.htm Texas Law Help: https://texaslawhelp.org/directory Phone: (800) 252-9690 Chat: https://texaslawhelp.org/ask-a-question Walk-in clinics: https://texaslawhelp.org/legal-events-and-clinics Addendum Heading Format: "ADDENDUM TO DIRECTIVE TO PHYSICIANS AND FAMILY OR SURROGATES" Title: [Your addendum topic] This document should be read together with my Directive to Physicians and Family or Surrogates under Texas Health & Safety Code Chapter 166. This addendum is intended to guide my physicians, family members, and medical decision makers in understanding my values, priorities, and preferences regarding medical treatment and end-of-life care. This document does not replace my Directive. In the event of any inconsistency, my Directive is the controlling document. Next Episode: Completing the Texas living will form, including witness requirements, notarization, and signing. Questions? info@legacytoolkit.com Disclaimer: We are not attorneys, financial advisors, or medical professionals. Everything shared is for educational purposes only. Consult an estate planning attorney in your state. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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    12 mins