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If you get hit by a bus tomorrow
By Elizabeth Cohen Empowered Patient, a regular feature from CNN Medical News correspondent Elizabeth Cohen,
helps put you in the driver's seat when it comes to health care. "Even
though I think I have another 30 good years left, I know tomorrow I could get hit on the road by some nitwit," says Balduzzi, 50,
who was a police officer for 15 years and a paramedic for eight in New York and is now a health and safety consultant for the insurance
industry. That's why he has all his ducks in a row: He's filled out all the right forms so his wife can make medical and financial
decisions for him in case he can't make them himself. We don't like to think about it, but any of us could get hit tomorrow by a nitwit.
So here, step by step, is what to do now to prepare. Step 1: Put crucial medical information in wallet and glove box Imagine the crash
scene. It's pandemonium. The paramedics come and scoop you up off the pavement. You're unconscious, or maybe incoherent. How will
they know what medicines you're taking and what medicines you're allergic to? That information could save your life. Write it all down
on a medical information card. Balduzzi has one downloadable for free here on his Web site. Put the cards in your wallet -- Balduzzi
has his in the see-through plastic section -- and in your glove box, and in anything else, like an appointment book, you carry around
with you. "Being redundant is a key part of preparedness," he says. Step 2: Put your "in case of emergency" numbers in wallet, glove
box, cell phone "I've spent many hours digging through people's wallets and going through cell phones looking for emergency contact
numbers," says Denise King, president of the Emergency Nurses Association. For the cell phone entries, Balduzzi once again recommends
redundancy. Emergency workers know to look for "ICE" which stands for "In Case of Emergency." An "AA" will keep the number at the
top of your contacts list. "AA ICE" or "AA Emergency info" or "ICE spouse," are all good ideas for cell phone entries. But the cell
phone isn't enough, King says. "When your car hits the tree at 50 mph, the cell phone goes flying," she says. "The wallet you're sitting
on is much more likely to still be there." Step 3: Appoint someone to make decisions for you Don't let your family wonder, or worse,
argue over, who's going to make life-and-death decisions for you. Designate a specific person using a health care proxy form, also
called a medical power of attorney or durable power of attorney. You should have in your files a financial power of attorney form.By
conveying power of attorney, you give a specific person legal authority to make property, financial and other legal decisions for
you in. For example, Marie Deveney, a trust and estates lawyer in If you have specific health care wishes you want your proxy to follow, you can spell them out in a living will. Legal
requirements for living wills vary from state to state. Click here to see a sample form. Step 4: Don't forget the HIPAA release form This
is the often forgotten form, Deveney says. Even though it's your own spouse or parent, or sibling who's sick, some hospitals won't
release any medical information because of HIPAA privacy regulations. It can also be difficult to deal with insurance companies or
doctors' offices on someone else's behalf without a HIPAA release form, she says. Lawyers often draw these up for their clients. Deveney
says this form is pretty good, downloadable for $9.99. Step 5: Give these forms to several people, and tell your family whom you've
appointed to make decisions for you "It's good to broadcast these documents around so somebody will have one when you need it," says
Carl Schneider, a law professor and bioethicist at the Also, let your family members know who has your
medical power of attorney. For example, if you've designated one of your three children to be your health care proxy, tell all three
who your choice is. "That way, if the non-designated sibling happens to be around during an emergency, they can call up the designated
sibling and say, 'it's time for you to kick into high gear.' " Letting everyone know also helps avoid hurt feelings later for the unselected.
"You can say, 'I love you all, but I thought Sally would do the best here,' " says Schneider. Click here to buy a document that helps
create a more detailed living will that also allows you to make spiritual and emotional requests, such as if you want certain prayers
read or music played while you're incapacitated. Elizabeth Cohen is a correspondent with CNN Medical News. Senior producer Jennifer
Pifer and associate producer Sabriya Rice contributed to this report. |
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