To: House Human
Services Committee
From:
Christopher T. Dodson,
Executive Director
Subject:
Senate Bill 2212 (Health Care
Directives)
Date:
March 14, 2007
The North Dakota Catholic Conference supports Senate Bill
2212.
The revisions made by the last Legislative Assembly to the
state’s laws on advance directives simplified the
legislative framework and created new opportunities to
educate and encourage the use of health care directives.
Senate Bill 2212 would take us another step in that
direction.
One part of the old law not revised in 2005 was a
requirement applicable only when a person is a resident or
patient of a nursing home or hospital and if that person appoints a health care
agent. In those cases: (1) the person must receive an
additional explanation about the appointment from a
designated individual, and (2) the facility or person must
complete additional paperwork verifying that the
explanation was given.
During the last two years, I conducted many workshops on
health care directives, for both religious and secular
groups. Participants - especially social workers and
employees of health care facilities - repeatedly described
the additional requirements as an unnecessary step for
someone appointing a health care agent.
Senate Bill 2212 would repeal that requirement. The law
already requires a person to be competent in order for he
or she to execute a health care directive. There is no
compelling reason to treat a person as less competent
– and therefore needing additional explanations
– merely because the person is inside a health care
facility.
Moreover, the additional requirement exists only when the
person in the health care facility appoints an agent. It
does not exist if the person executed a health care
directive that contained only written instructions. It
makes no sense to treat the person appointing a health care
agent as less competent than the person who provides just
written instructions. It especially makes no sense in light
of the legislature’s intent to encourage the
appointment of health care agents wherever possible.
We urge a Do Pass
recommendation on Senate Bill
2212.