Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 78, No. 11, November
2005
Don't Make Decisions While You're Circling the Drain
This holiday season, present your
family with the gift of peace of
mind by planning ahead for your health needs. Do it now while you're
able. Do it before you're in a crisis situation.
by George C. Brown
State Bar executive director
The winter holidays are rapidly approaching.
During this time many of us turn our thoughts to gift-giving. If your
thoughts have yet to turn that way, there are thousands of retailers
encouraging your thinking in their direction. Let me remind you of
another form of giving to your family: planning ahead for your health
needs.
In 1999, then-State Bar President Leonard Loeb reminded the bar of
the tens of thousands of Wisconsin residents who have not made legal
plans to deal with their future health needs. Some people find the issue
disturbing, and so wish to ignore it. Others have simply given it no
thought. Some people wish to make plans, but find the process
intimidating.
Under President Loeb's leadership, the State Bar teamed up with the
Wisconsin Medical Society and the Wisconsin Health & Hospital
Association to create "A Gift to Your Family: Planning Ahead for
Future Health Needs," a consumer guide to educate people about the
issues surrounding advance directives, health care agents, and organ and
tissue donation. The 24-page guide includes several easy-to-complete
forms, with instructions, including a power of attorney for health care
form and a living will form. (A Spanish-language version of the guide
will be available by mid-2006.) The three associations joined together
to distribute the first 20,000 copies free to the public.
Today, the guide is in its sixth edition and nearly 175,000 print
copies have been distributed beyond the first 20,000 copies - and that's
in addition to the thousands of guides downloaded free from WisBar and
LegalExplorer, the Bar's consumer Web site. Several health care
institutions, including Dean Health, Meriter Hospital, Luther Midelfort,
and Lakeview, provide the guides to their patients. Recently, American
Family Insurance distributed 15,000 copies to its agents to give to
insureds.
Recently, I was talking to a friend about issues that middle-aged
men face, including caring for our aging parents. I mentioned "A
Gift to Your Family: Planning Ahead for Future Health Needs" to him
and he said he wished he'd had it several months ago. Both of his
parents are still alive, but his dad has been quite ill with cancer. His
dad, a stubborn man, never wanted to talk about life's eventualities
except to say that things should just take their natural course. When my
friend's dad suffered a serious heart attack, the doctor asked my friend
what the family wanted to do.
My friend turned to his father. "Dad, we're circling the drain
here. What do you want to do?" His dad decided he wanted to live,
and he is well on the mend. Today, my friend's father and mother both
have advance directives, as do my friend and his wife. As my friend
said, "It's only fair to do this for your family."
To order copies of "A Gift to Your Family: Planning Ahead for
Future Health Needs" for yourself or your clients, call the State
Bar of Wisconsin at (800) 728-7788 or visit www.wisbar.org.
Wisconsin
Lawyer