An Advanced Directive and Living Will allows you to outline your medical preferences and designate someone you trust to make healthcare decisions on your behalf if you are unable to communicate. At Riseling & Rhodes, P.C., we help clients across Oklahoma prepare these important documents with clarity and care, ensuring your beliefs and values guide your treatment during unexpected medical situations.
Advanced Directives & Living Wills
Honor Your Healthcare Wishes With Clarity and Compassion
Why Advanced Healthcare Planning Matters
Many people create an advanced directive because they want to provide clarity during moments when families often feel overwhelmed. A well-prepared directive ensures your preferences are known, prevents uncertainty, and allows loved ones to act confidently on your behalf.
Our role is to help you express your wishes clearly and legally so your healthcare decisions remain in trusted hands.
What Is an Advanced Directive?
Appointment of a healthcare proxy or agent (within the directive document)
Instructions regarding medical interventions or life-sustaining treatments
Preferences for comfort-focused, palliative, or hospice care
Guidance for physicians when you cannot communicate your wishes
What is a Medical Power of Attorney?
A Medical Power of Attorney is a document that allows you to appoint individuals you trust to make health-care decisions for you if you are unable to do so yourself. The agent works with your doctors to make choices based on your wishes and circumstances. In practice, a Medical Power of Attorney and an Advance Directive serve very similar purposes.
However, it is important to have both to meet legal requirements. At Riseling & Rhodes, we combine the two into a single document for simplicity and ease of use.
Living Wills and Healthcare Decision-Making Authority
Living Will – Communicates your treatment preferences if you are unable to eat and drink by mouth and two doctors have determined that you will pass away within the next six months. This is often referred to as the “plug or unplug” document.
Healthcare Decision-Making Authority – Allows you to name someone you trust to make medical decisions if you are unable to.
Advanced Directive – Often combines both components into one coordinated document.
Benefits of an Advanced Directive and Living Will
Maintains your autonomy by ensuring your wishes guide your care
Reduces stress and uncertainty for loved ones
Provides physicians with clear, legally recognized instructions
Ensures decisions reflect your values and beliefs
Coordinates seamlessly with your broader estate plan
For many clients, creating an advanced directive is one of the most thoughtful steps they take for those who love them.
Our Planning Process
Consultation and Discussion
We listen to your concerns, your values, and the types of care you prefer in various medical situations.
Drafting Your Directive
Your attorney prepares a tailored document that meets all legal requirements and clearly reflects your wishes.
Execution and Witnessing
We guide you through proper signing and witnessing to ensure your directive is fully valid in your state.
Key Services Included
PERSONALIZED CONSULTATION REGARDING MEDICAL PREFERENCES
CUSTOM-DRAFTED ADVANCED DIRECTIVE OR LIVING WILL
GUIDANCE ON APPOINTING A TRUSTED HEALTHCARE DECISION-MAKER
ASSISTANCE WITH PROPER EXECUTION AND WITNESSING
UPDATES AS YOUR CIRCUMSTANCES EVOLVE
How This Fits Into Your Complete Estate Plan
A statutory power of attorney for financial decisions
Other planning documents that provide clarity during incapacity
When to Create or Update an Advanced Directive
You are updating your estate plan
You have experienced changes in health
You marry, divorce, remarry, or relocate
Your preferences regarding medical care evolve
A previously named decision-maker is no longer available
Who This Is For
Anyone wanting clarity about medical care preferences
Individuals with chronic health conditions
Couples wishing to avoid uncertainty during emergencies
Adults preparing or updating an estate plan
Families wanting to provide clear guidance for loved ones
Individuals with non-spouse partners