Advance Care Directives
An Advance Care Directive is the essential back-up plan which enables you to express your wishes, preferences & instructions for your future health care, end of life, living arrangements and personal matters. It’s so easy and not a burdensome.
Our legal advices include:
About the Advance Care Directive and why or when we should have it
About the Substitute Decision Maker and how to choose the right ones
Making your Advance Care Directive upon follow advices:
- Get started: Think about your own wishes and desires, what kind of care you would like to receive or refuse
- People related to your decisions
- Choose one or more Substitute Decision Makers (SDM) on your behalf in case you are unable to communicate or make a decision by yourself
- Fill in Advance Care Directive form
- Make sure the legal power of all related documents
- How to keep and store the Advance Care Directive, and how to inform relevant people when it’s necessary

Guide & Support

An Advance Care Directive allows people over the age of 18 to appoint Substitute Decision Makers who can make decisions on their behalf.

Advance Care Directive is used for expressing your wishes, preferences & instructions for your future health care, end of life, living arrangements and personal matters.

To stop a POA you granted for another person, you should complete a revocation process. If you want to give up the power that you are given by the principal.

A Power of Attorney has its effects for while you are alive and is no longer valid after your death, whereas a Will is for after you pass away.

Simplicity is the heart of many successful businesses as well as happy life. Devoting our life as professional law experts.

If you have not made an Enduring Power of Attorney while you have legal capacity, your relatives may not be able to handle your affairs informally.