D. Medical Care Decisions Committees (MCDCs).

     One possible way to appoint proxies is to establish
your own Medical Care Decisions Committee (MCDC).
This is a committee consisting of 3 to 5 people who
know you best and who agree with your medical ethics.

     (An MCDC is not an institutional ethics committee.
Ethics committees are established by hospitals, nursing homes, etc.
to review medical decisions and/or set health-care policy.
These committees are an important part of the health-care system.
But they usually have no personal knowledge of the patients
prior to reviewing their cases.
Your individualized Medical Care Decisions Committee
might have occasion to consult with an institutional ethics committee.
But your MCDC is a group of family and/or friends
whom you legally empower to make your medical decisions for you.)

     When medical decisions are made by only one individual,
there is always room for second-guessing.
This applies to doctors, judges, spouses, or adult children.
Any one person acting alone can make a unwise choice.
But when several people jointly reach an important decision,
their choice is more likely to be in your best interest.
And more respect will be granted to a carefully-constructed MCDC
than to a spouse or an adult child making a medical decision alone.
When one person acts alone—even if that person is the patient—
others can always question the wisdom of that person's choices.
And individuals acting alone often do reach foolish decisions
—distorted by powerful emotions or misunderstood medical information.

     Creating an MCDC is one way to include several of your adult children
instead of having to select just one and exclude the others.  

     A group of wise adults is less likely to be swayed
by irrational forces (such as fear, despair, depression, or pain)
than an individual making medical decisions alone.
You might become irrational when suffering a serious disease
and/or confronting your own death.
You can protect yourself from your own irrationality
by appointing a committee of wise relatives and friends
to make your decisions for you when your thinking might be impaired.
And the decisions of such a committee are more likely to be honored
than your possibly-distorted decisions when you are dying
—or when you might have become a former person.

QUESTION 2:             CHOOSING YOUR PROXIES             by JAMES PARK              51



     You might be able to participate

in the deliberations of your MCDC in some degree.
You might not lose your mental faculties all at once.
Your proxies will hear and weigh your current views,
asking how well those views correspond with your Advance Directive,
which you wrote when you were fully able to make medical decisions.

     When your decision-making abilities are questionable,
you might be invited to participate in the discussions
the way a child might be included in such decisions.
A child would be informed as much as possible.
And the parents would get some guidance from the child.
But the parents have the final power to decide for a minor child.

     Your family and friends—who have known you for years
are best able to grasp the fullness of person you have been.
Your natural parents have known you since you were born.
Your siblings have known you for most of your life.
Your spouse or other partner has known you for a certain number of years.
And each of your friends has known you for a specific period of time.

     Once you have listed everyone who has known you long enough,
you narrow the list to the people who agree with your medical ethics.
Different generations often differ about medical decisions.
People born in the first half of the 20th century
might be more inclined to follow whatever the doctors suggest.
But educated people born after the Second World War
might find it easier to challenge medical authority
and to decide for themselves
—drawing on professional medical opinions as much as seems wise.

     If you have developed your own medical ethics,
you should discuss these perspectives and values
with the people you are considering for your MCDC.
What do the prospective members believe about the right to die?
about the right to withhold and/or withdraw life-supports?
about the right to choose a voluntary death?
about the right to grant a merciful death?

     One of the best ways to confirm these agreements
is to write a detailed Advance Directive for Medical Care.
Then prospective members of your MCDC should comment
on the medical ethics embodied in your Advance Directive.
Those who agree most closely can be selected to enforce your decisions.
And the others can be respectfully excluded from your MCDC.

52      YOUR LAST YEAR: CREATING YOUR ADVANCE DIRECTIVE FOR MEDICAL CARE



    The selection above is the first two pages
of the section on Medical Care Decision Committees.
Further explanation of such committees
(three and a half pages more---pages 53-56)
are found in the book: Your Last Year:
Creating Your Own Advance Directive for Medical Care
.



Go to the index page for Your Last Year:
Creating Your Own Advance Directive for Medical Care.



Go to the Portal for Advance Directives.



Go to the Right-to-Die Portal.



Go to the Medical Ethics index page.



Go to the DEATH index page.



Go to the beginning of this website
James Leonard Park—Free Library