Choosing the Person Who
Will Speak for You
Decision-Maker, Not Decision-Owner
Your proxy’s job is to make the decisions you would make if you could. They are not choosing for themselves — they are speaking for you, guided by your values, your wishes, and the reflections you documented in Step 2.
Activated Only When Needed
A proxy designation does not take effect while you can still speak for yourself. It activates only when a physician determines you lack the capacity to make or communicate medical decisions.
Willingness
Never assume someone is willing to serve. This is a serious emotional and practical responsibility. Ask directly, explain what it involves, and give them permission to say no.
Emotional Steadiness
Your proxy may need to authorize the withdrawal of life support or refuse a treatment that family members want. Choose someone who can make hard decisions without being paralyzed by grief or guilt.
Availability
Your proxy needs to be reachable. A sibling who lives overseas or a friend who travels constantly may not be the best choice, regardless of how well they know your wishes.
Advocacy
Hospitals can be intimidating. Your proxy must be willing to push back on physicians, ask hard questions, and insist that your wishes are honored — even when the medical team disagrees.
Share Your Quality of Life Reflections
- What does a good day look like for you?
- What abilities and relationships matter most?
- What are you most afraid of at the end of life?
- When would medical treatment feel like too much?
Discuss Specific Scenarios
- If you had advanced dementia and could no longer recognize family, would you want life-sustaining treatment?
- If you were in a permanent coma with no chance of recovery, what would you want done?
- If a treatment could extend your life by weeks but leave you in significant pain, would you want it?
- Would you want to be kept alive by machines if there were no realistic hope of meaningful recovery?
Clarify the Boundaries of Their Authority
- Are there any treatments you would never want, under any circumstances?
- Are there any treatments you would always want, regardless of prognosis?
- Do you want your proxy to consult with other family members, or do they have final say?
- Is there anyone whose input you specifically do or do not want considered?
A Written Document
Most states provide a standard healthcare proxy or durable power of attorney for healthcare form. You can also use the form in your state’s advance directive packet. It must be signed and dated.
Witnesses or Notarization
Most states require two adult witnesses who are not your proxy. Some states require notarization instead of or in addition to witnesses. Check your state’s specific requirements.
Distribution
Give copies to your proxy, your alternate proxy, your primary care physician, your hospital, and any family members who need to know. Keep the original in a safe but accessible place — not a safe deposit box.
Name an Alternate
Always designate an alternate proxy in case your primary proxy is unavailable, incapacitated, or unwilling to serve when the time comes. The same criteria apply.
Why This Matters
Without a designated healthcare proxy, the decision about who speaks for you falls to a statutory hierarchy defined by your state — typically spouse, then adult children, then parents, then siblings. That hierarchy does not account for estranged relationships, blended families, or the reality that the person who knows you best may not be a blood relative at all.
Worse, when no proxy is named and family members disagree, medical teams are left to make decisions by committee or by legal default. The result is often aggressive treatment that the patient would not have wanted — because doing more feels safer than doing less when no one has clear authority.
Choosing a proxy is an act of trust, clarity, and love. It is one of the most important things you can do for the people who care about you — because it relieves them of the unbearable weight of guessing.
Next Step: Your Advance Directive
With your proxy chosen and your values clarified, you are now ready to create the document that puts it all in writing — your advance directive. This is where your wishes become legally binding instructions.
Continue to Step 4 →