Advance Care Planning for Seniors: Living Wills, DNR Orders, and Healthcare Proxies
Advance care planning encompasses the legal instruments, clinical protocols, and decision-making frameworks that determine how medical treatment is administered when an individual can no longer speak for themselves. This page covers the three primary document types — living wills, do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders, and healthcare proxies — along with the regulatory structures, classification boundaries, and common points of confusion that affect their real-world application. The stakes are concrete: the American Bar Association Commission on Law and Aging has documented that a significant gap exists between the proportion of adults who say end-of-life preferences matter to them and those who have completed any formal planning document, leaving clinical teams and families without legally operative guidance at critical moments.
- Definition and Scope
- Core Mechanics or Structure
- Causal Relationships or Drivers
- Classification Boundaries
- Tradeoffs and Tensions
- Common Misconceptions
- Checklist or Steps
- Reference Table or Matrix
- References
Definition and Scope
Advance care planning (ACP) is the process by which individuals document their medical treatment preferences and designate authorized decision-makers before a loss of decisional capacity occurs. The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) formally recognizes advance care planning as a billable clinical service under CPT codes 99497 and 99498, introduced in the 2016 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule, signaling federal acknowledgment that structured planning conversations carry distinct clinical value (CMS Medicare Physician Fee Schedule).
The scope of ACP spans three legally distinct instrument categories:
- Advance directives — written documents expressing treatment preferences (e.g., living wills)
- Proxy designations — legal appointments of a surrogate decision-maker (e.g., durable power of attorney for healthcare)
- Physician orders — clinician-authored medical orders translating patient preferences into actionable clinical instructions (e.g., DNR orders, POLST forms)
Each category operates under a different legal framework. Advance directives and proxy designations are governed by state statute; physician orders carry immediate clinical force within care settings. The Patient Self-Determination Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. § 1395cc(f)) requires Medicare- and Medicaid-participating facilities to inform patients of their right to execute advance directives at the point of admission.
For seniors navigating hospice and palliative care or managing chronic disease, the absence of completed ACP documents directly affects the specificity of care that providers can deliver.
Core Mechanics or Structure
Living Wills
A living will is a written declaration specifying which life-sustaining treatments a person does or does not want under defined clinical circumstances — typically terminal illness, permanent unconsciousness, or end-stage condition. The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO) maintains state-specific living will templates reflecting each jurisdiction's execution requirements (witness counts, notarization rules, and witness eligibility restrictions vary across all 50 states plus the District of Columbia).
Common treatment categories addressed in living wills include:
- Mechanical ventilation
- Artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH)
- Dialysis
- Cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
- Antibiotics for life-threatening infections
- Comfort care / palliative sedation
DNR Orders
A do-not-resuscitate order is a physician-authored medical order — not a patient document — directing clinical staff to withhold CPR if cardiac or respiratory arrest occurs. DNR orders operate inside a care setting and require a licensed physician or, in states that permit it, a nurse practitioner or physician assistant to sign. Outside a hospital or nursing facility, standard DNR orders may not be honored by emergency medical services (EMS), because EMS personnel typically operate under state-specific out-of-hospital DNR (OOH-DNR) statutes that mandate a distinct form.
Healthcare Proxies / Durable Power of Attorney for Healthcare
A healthcare proxy (also called a health care agent or patient advocate, depending on state terminology) is a person appointed through a durable power of attorney for healthcare (DPAHC) to make medical decisions when the principal lacks capacity. Unlike a living will, which applies only in the scenarios it explicitly names, a healthcare proxy has broad authority to interpret and apply the principal's values across any clinical circumstance. The proxy designation survives incapacity by virtue of the "durable" clause — a standard feature of DPAHC instruments under the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act, which has been adopted in modified form by 21 states as of the Uniform Law Commission's published adoptions record (Uniform Law Commission).
POLST / MOLST Forms
Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) — called MOLST, MOST, or POST in some states — translate patient preferences into portable medical orders that follow a patient across care settings. POLST forms are intended for individuals with serious illness or advanced age who face a real risk of a life-threatening clinical event within 12 months. The National POLST Paradigm maintains an endorsed state program registry (National POLST).
Causal Relationships or Drivers
Three structural factors increase the clinical relevance of ACP for older adults:
Cognitive trajectory: The Alzheimer's Association reports that approximately 6.7 million Americans age 65 and older are living with Alzheimer's dementia (Alzheimer's Association 2023 Facts and Figures). Progressive cognitive impairment eliminates decisional capacity before end-of-life clinical events, making earlier documentation directly linked to whether preferences can be honored. The relationship between dementia and Alzheimer's care options and timely ACP completion is therefore causal, not merely correlational.
Hospitalization patterns: Medicare claims data analyzed by Dartmouth Atlas researchers show that older adults with serious illness average 3 or more hospitalizations in the final 6 months of life, each representing a transition point where undocumented preferences create clinical uncertainty.
Care transitions: Each transfer between settings — hospital to skilled nursing facility, skilled nursing to home — creates a document-continuity risk. POLST forms were developed specifically to address this, as standard advance directives are frequently unavailable or inaccessible during emergency transfers. Senior transitions of care represent a primary failure mode when ACP documents are siloed in a single provider's records.
Medicare billing incentives: CMS's inclusion of CPT 99497/99498 in the fee schedule created a reimbursable clinical workflow for ACP conversations in primary care, structurally increasing the frequency of provider-initiated documentation.
Classification Boundaries
| Instrument | Author | Legal Basis | Activation Trigger | Clinical Force |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Living Will | Patient | State statute | Incapacity + qualifying condition | Interpretive — requires clinical judgment to apply |
| Healthcare Proxy (DPAHC) | Patient (designates agent) | State statute (durable POA) | Incapacity | Broad — agent acts for patient in real time |
| DNR Order (in-hospital) | Physician | Clinical order | Cardiac/respiratory arrest | Immediate — staff must follow |
| OOH-DNR | Physician | State EMS regulation | Cardiac/respiratory arrest outside hospital | Immediate for EMS if correct state form used |
| POLST/MOLST | Physician + Patient | State POLST statute or regulation | Immediate (portable medical order) | Immediate across care settings |
A living will does not authorize a specific person to make decisions — it only records preferences. A healthcare proxy does not specify individual treatments — it designates an authorized interpreter. A DNR order applies exclusively to CPR; it does not restrict antibiotics, surgery, or other interventions unless separately specified. Conflating these boundaries is the most common source of clinical misapplication.
Tradeoffs and Tensions
Specificity vs. Flexibility: Highly specific living wills may fail to anticipate the actual clinical scenario that arises. Vague instructions ("no heroic measures") provide little actionable guidance. The proxy model addresses this by giving a human agent interpretive authority, but introduces the risk that the proxy's decisions may not accurately reflect the patient's preferences — particularly when family dynamics create pressure.
State Portability: Advance directives executed under one state's laws may not be automatically valid in another state. The Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act aimed to create interstate recognition, but adoption is partial. A patient who winters in Florida but executes a living will in Minnesota faces genuine legal ambiguity.
Revocability timing: Patients retain the right to revoke advance directives at any time while competent. However, in dementia cases, clinicians must assess whether a later verbal revocation represents an authentic preference or a symptom-driven response — a tension the Alzheimer's Association flags as a recurring ethics consultation trigger.
Proxy authority limits: 24 states impose restrictions on what healthcare proxies can authorize, including decisions about artificial nutrition and hydration or psychiatric treatment, even when the proxy holds a DPAHC. State-specific statutory limits override a broadly worded proxy document.
Emergency override: EMS crews responding to a 911 call in a residential setting are legally required to initiate resuscitation unless a valid OOH-DNR form is immediately available and meets state-specific format requirements. A hospital DNR order alone does not meet this threshold in most states.
Common Misconceptions
Misconception: A signed living will guarantees providers will follow it.
Correction: Living wills are interpretive documents. Physicians must determine whether the clinical situation matches the document's triggering conditions. If the language is ambiguous or the scenario is not addressed, clinical teams retain authority to exercise judgment, and institutional ethics committees may be involved.
Misconception: A DNR order means "do not treat."
Correction: A DNR order is exclusively limited to cardiopulmonary resuscitation. It does not restrict pain management, antibiotics, IV fluids, surgery, or any other intervention. Patients with DNR orders routinely receive aggressive treatment for reversible conditions. The National POLST Paradigm explicitly separates CPR orders from medical intervention orders and comfort-focused care sections.
Misconception: A healthcare proxy document works across all 50 states.
Correction: Proxy designation is state-governed. A durable power of attorney for healthcare must meet the execution requirements of the state where it will be applied, not merely the state where it was signed. Some states require specific statutory forms.
Misconception: Advance directives are only for people who are terminally ill.
Correction: The Patient Self-Determination Act requires Medicare-participating hospitals and nursing facilities to ask all adult patients about advance directives at admission — not only those with life-limiting diagnoses. ACP is relevant for any adult who could face a sudden loss of capacity, including those managing conditions tracked through senior cardiology services or senior neurology services.
Misconception: Once completed, advance directives do not need to be revisited.
Correction: The National Institute on Aging recommends reviewing advance directives after major health changes, a change in marital status, or relocation to a different state (NIA Advance Care Planning). Outdated documents may name deceased proxies or reference preferences that no longer reflect the patient's current values.
Checklist or Steps
The following sequence reflects the standard components of a complete advance care planning process, as described by the American Bar Association Commission on Law and Aging and National POLST Paradigm program materials. This is a reference framework, not legal or clinical guidance.
Phase 1: Values clarification
- [ ] Identify which health states would be unacceptable to the individual (e.g., permanent unconsciousness, ventilator dependence)
- [ ] Identify priorities: length of life vs. quality of life vs. preservation of function
- [ ] Discuss preferences with family members or trusted persons who may act as witnesses or proxies
Phase 2: Document selection
- [ ] Determine which document types apply: living will, DPAHC, or both
- [ ] For individuals with serious illness: determine whether a POLST/MOLST form is clinically appropriate (typically requires a physician conversation)
- [ ] Obtain state-specific forms from state health department or National POLST Paradigm's state program registry
Phase 3: Execution
- [ ] Complete execution requirements for the relevant state (witness signatures, notarization, disqualified witnesses)
- [ ] Ensure the designated proxy is willing and able to serve
- [ ] Retain original documents; provide copies to proxy, primary care physician, and any treating specialists
Phase 4: Distribution and registration
- [ ] Provide copies to all treating providers and facilities (hospital, nursing facility, home health agency)
- [ ] Register with state advance directive registry if the state maintains one (33 states maintained registries as of the American Bar Association's most recent review)
- [ ] For POLST: ensure the original or a copy travels with the patient across care settings
Phase 5: Periodic review
- [ ] Review documents after any major health change
- [ ] Review after change in proxy availability (death, divorce, estrangement)
- [ ] Review after relocation to a different state
- [ ] Review documents every 3 to 5 years as a baseline interval
Reference Table or Matrix
Advance Care Planning Document Comparison
| Feature | Living Will | DPAHC / Healthcare Proxy | DNR Order (In-Hospital) | OOH-DNR | POLST / MOLST |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Who executes it | Patient | Patient (designates agent) | Physician | Physician | Physician + Patient |
| Legal authority | State statute | State statute | Clinical order authority | State EMS regulation | State statute or regulation |
| Scope of decisions | Named scenarios only | All medical decisions (subject to state limits) | CPR only | CPR only | CPR + medical interventions + comfort care |
| Applies outside hospital | Situational | Yes | No (standard form) | Yes (state-specific form) | Yes (portable) |
| Requires physician to activate | Yes — clinical judgment needed | No — proxy acts directly | N/A — already an order | N/A — already an order | N/A — already an order |
| Best suited for | Any competent adult | Any competent adult | Hospitalized patients | Community-dwelling patients with serious illness | Patients with serious illness or advanced frailty |
| Revocable | Yes, while competent | Yes, while competent | Yes — physician can rescind | Yes — physician can rescind | Yes — patient or physician |
| Interstate portability | Partial (varies by state) | Partial (varies by state) | Not applicable | Not applicable | Partial — National POLST Paradigm standardization ongoing |
References
- Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services — Advance Care Planning Medicare Coverage
- National Institute on Aging — Advance Care Planning
- National POLST Paradigm
- Uniform Law Commission — Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act
- American Bar Association Commission on Law and Aging — Health Care Decision Making
- Alzheimer's Association — 2023 Alzheimer's Disease Facts and Figures
- National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization — Advance Directives
- Patient Self-Determination Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1395cc(f)
- HHS Office for Civil Rights — Patient Rights and Advance Directives