Health Care Proxies and Advance Directives: A Miami Checklist

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Medical emergencies do not wait for paperwork. If you were unconscious in a Miami hospital tomorrow, your loved ones could be left guessing about your wishes — or fighting with each other — unless you have already put your health care directives in place. Florida gives you clear tools to speak for yourself in advance. Here is the practical checklist.

Checklist Item 1: Name a Health Care Surrogate

Under Chapter 765, Florida Statutes, you can designate a “health care surrogate” — the person authorized to make medical decisions for you if you cannot. This is Florida’s version of a health care proxy. Choose someone level-headed who lives close enough to respond, and name an alternate in case your first choice is unavailable when a Miami-area hospital calls.

Checklist Item 2: Decide Whether the Surrogate Acts Now or Later

Florida lets you create a surrogate designation that takes effect immediately — allowing your surrogate to discuss your care and access records even before any incapacity — or one that activates only when physicians determine you cannot make your own decisions. Pick the option that fits your comfort level and note it clearly in the document.

Checklist Item 3: Add a Living Will for End-of-Life Wishes

A living will is separate from a surrogate designation. It states your wishes about life-prolonging procedures if you have a terminal condition, end-stage condition, or persistent vegetative state. Florida law sets out a recognized living will format. Putting your wishes in writing spares your surrogate from carrying that weight alone.

Checklist Item 4: Meet Florida’s Witness Requirements

Florida advance directives generally must be signed in the presence of two adult witnesses, and at least one witness cannot be your spouse or a blood relative. Keep this in mind if you plan to sign at a family gathering — line up a qualified witness in advance.

Checklist Item 5: Authorize HIPAA Access

Federal privacy rules can block even close family from getting information. Include language authorizing release of your protected health information to your surrogate and others you choose, so a Jackson Health or Baptist Health team can speak freely with the right person.

Checklist Item 6: Consider a Pre-Need Guardian Designation

Florida also lets you name, in advance, who you would want a court to appoint as guardian if guardianship ever became necessary. Pairing this with your surrogate designation gives the court your preference and reduces the chance of a contested appointment.

Checklist Item 7: Distribute and Update

A directive locked away helps no one. Give copies to your surrogate, your primary physician, and your Miami hospital of choice, and keep one with your other estate documents. Review the documents after any major life change — divorce, a move, or the death of your named surrogate.

Putting It Together

A complete Florida advance directive package usually pairs a health care surrogate designation, a living will, and HIPAA authorization, often alongside the durable power of attorney that handles your finances. Together they keep decisions in trusted hands and out of court.

This is general information, not legal advice. Florida’s directive formalities are specific and change over time, so consult a licensed Florida attorney to prepare documents suited to your situation.

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DISCLAIMER: The information provided in this blog is for informational purposes only and should not be considered legal advice. The content of this blog may not reflect the most current legal developments. No attorney-client relationship is formed by reading this blog or contacting Morgan Legal Group PLLP.

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