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Advance Directive for Mental Health

Northwest Justice Project

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A Mental Health Advance Directive can help if you have a mental illness that sometimes effects your ability to make health care choices. You can also appoint a power of attorney for mental health and consent to specific treatments in advance that a general health care directive and power of attorney can't authorize. (Form and instructions)

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NJP Planning 511

Mental Health Advance Directive

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Gather this information before you begin:

  • Medications you take (name, dosage, pharmacy)
  • Medications you're allergic to or had bad experiences with
  • Contact info for your power of attorney (if any) and any alternates

Fast facts

It’s a form you use to say what you want to happen if your mental illness become so severe that you need help from others. It provides guidance for your health care power of attorney, friends, relatives, and health care providers about what kinds of mental health care work best for you. It can let them know what kinds of care you need, including medications, treatments, and even who can visit you if you are in a hospital. 

Your directive can include anything that might help others know how to give you the care you need when you experience severe symptoms from your mental illness, including the following examples:

  • You can approve, refuse, or put limits on psychiatric medications
  • You can approve, refuse, or put limits on psychiatric treatments
  • You can approve hospitalization if your symptoms become severe.
  • You can say who can and cannot visit you if you are in the hospital.
  • You can name the kinds of care you want medical staff to try before they resort to more serious measures like restraints. 

You should attach a copy of your Power of Attorney form to your Mental Health Advance Directive.

A general health care power of attorney can't authorize mental health hospitalization or electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). If you want your power of attorney to be able to consent to those things, you must appoint a power of attorney for mental health care. You can do that on your Mental Health Advance Directive form. You should appoint the same person as your agent for mental health care as for general health care to avoid confusion. 

If you don’t have a Power of Attorney for Health Care, you should fill that out too. You can fill it out separately or at the same time as your Mental Health Advance Directive on WA Forms Online. 

Think carefully about who you want as your power of attorney (agent). Choose someone that you trust to make decisions in line with your health care values, even if they would make different decisions for themself.

Under state law, you’re capable of making your own decisions if you don’t have a guardian and no judge has found you to be “incapacitated.” You can read the state law about this, including the legal definition of capacity, at RCW 71.32.020

You can also change or cancel your Mental Health Advance Directive at any time. You can do this verbally or in writing. Make sure to tell your medical providers and anyone you gave power of attorney. 

It’s best if you sign your directive in front of a notary. 

If you can’t find a notary, you can sign in front of 2 witnesses. Here’s a list of people who can’t witness your signature: 

  • Someone you’ve given power of attorney for health care to 
  • Your medical provider
  • An owner or employee of any facility where you’re a patient or where you live
  • Anyone related to you 
  • Anyone who you’re dating
  • Anyone who could profit from you getting mental health treatment

You should give it to any medical providers involved in your mental health treatment and any agent you’ve named in your directive and Power of Attorney.

You should also ask your local hospital if they’ll put it on file for you.

Yes. A Mental Health Advance Directive is a legal advance directive. Medical providers are usually legally required to follow your advance directives. The best way to make sure your wishes will be honored is to talk with your medical team, your care facility, your caregivers, and your family members about your Mental Health Advance Directive.

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