Health care proxy

Share your wishes by means of an advance care directive

The advance care directive sets out how a person's business and private obligations are regulated in the event of temporary or&nbsppermanent incapacity of judgment.

With an advance care directive, you determine in advance who can manage your personal and financial affairs if you are no longer able to do so yourself due to incapacity (e.g. dementia) or an accident (e.g. coma). It is a legal instrument and serves to safeguard your own wishes and needs and to entrust your preferred person with the representation of your affairs.

You, if you are capable of acting, as well as any other natural person, can draw up an advance care directive. You can only appoint natural persons to represent your personal welfare,

and natural and/or legal persons to represent your financial welfare.

In order to represent a person lacking capacity, the child and adult protection authority (KESB) will (have to) appoint an adviser. In addition to a relative, a third party (professional guardian) can also be appointed as a guardian. The guardian is obliged to report to the KESB on a regular basis and must even obtain its consent for certain transactions.

You can have the advance care directive drawn up by a notary and publicly notarized or write, date and sign it by hand from A to Z.

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Roger Steiner
Manager
Attorney at Law, holder of the Lucerne notary patent