An elderly client’s daughter called my office in a panic. Her father had fallen in his Manhattan apartment and was unresponsive at the hospital. The doctors were asking about intubation, and she and her brother could not agree on what their father would have wanted. The attending physician asked them a direct question: “Does he have a health care proxy?” They didn’t know. In that moment of crisis, a family argument began, and critical time was lost.
This situation is far too common. When we are unable to speak for ourselves, someone must. The question is whether it will be a person you chose, guided by instructions you wrote, or a stranger appointed by a court. Two documents are central to this contingency planning: the Health Care Proxy and the Living Will. They are often confused, but in New York, they serve distinct and complementary roles.
The Health Care Proxy: Appointing Your Agent
A Health Care Proxy is an act of profound trust. In this legal document, you appoint a person—your health care agent—to make medical decisions on your behalf if you are determined to be incapacitated. This is not about end-of-life care exclusively. It covers any situation where you cannot communicate your own wishes, whether from an accident, illness, or surgery.
The authority of this document is established under New York Public Health Law § 2981. It gives your chosen agent the legal standing to speak with your voice. They can access your medical records, consult with doctors, and consent to or refuse treatment based on their understanding of your values. The person you name becomes your fiduciary for matters of health and well-being.
Choosing this person is one of the most significant decisions in your planning. It should not automatically be your spouse or eldest child. The right agent is someone who understands you deeply, can remain calm under pressure, and will honor your wishes even if they conflict with their own. I always advise clients to have a frank conversation with their potential agent before signing the document. Does this person know your feelings about life-sustaining treatment? Are they prepared to ask tough questions of medical staff? This conversation is as important as the document itself.
The Living Will: Your Written Instructions
If the Health Care Proxy answers “who,” the Living Will answers “what.” A Living Will is a written declaration of your desires concerning medical treatment at the end of life. It provides specific instructions about what you would—or would not—want. This often includes directives on:
- Life-support systems, such as mechanical ventilation
- Artificial nutrition and hydration
- Resuscitation (CPR) if your heart or breathing stops
- Palliative care to manage pain
Unlike the Health Care Proxy, no specific statute in New York governs the Living Will. However, our courts have consistently recognized it as clear and convincing evidence of a person’s wishes. It provides the crucial guidance your health care agent and medical providers need to make decisions that align with your principles.
The primary limitation of a Living Will is that it cannot anticipate every possible medical scenario. Medicine is complex. A crisis rarely unfolds exactly as you might imagine. That is why a Living Will is most powerful when it works in concert with a Health Care Proxy.
A Person and a Plan: Why You Need Both
I often describe the relationship between these two documents with an analogy. The Living Will is the map you’ve drawn—it shows your destination and the routes you prefer. The Health Care Proxy is the driver you’ve chosen for the journey.
A driver with no map is forced to guess. A map with no driver is just a piece of paper. You need both. Your Living Will provides the ethical and personal framework. Your Health Care Proxy provides the human judgment necessary to apply that framework to an unforeseen, real-world medical situation. What if a new treatment becomes available that your Living Will, written five years ago, doesn’t address? Your agent, armed with the principles from your Living Will and knowledge of you as a person, can make an informed, intentional decision.
Without these documents, your family is left in an agonizing position. Disagreements can lead to fractured relationships and costly legal battles in Surrogate’s Court to appoint a guardian. The process is public, expensive, and emotionally draining—the very things prudent planning is designed to avoid. Stewardship of your legacy includes making your wishes for your own care clear, relieving your family of that impossible burden.
These are not documents you create once and file away forever. They should be reviewed every few years, or after any major life event—a marriage, a divorce, a significant diagnosis. The person you chose as your agent a decade ago may no longer be the right choice. Your views on medical care may have evolved. A well-drafted plan is a living plan.
The first step in this process is not paperwork. It is a conversation. Before any documents are drafted, we sit down to identify the one person you trust to be your agent and to define the principles that will guide their decisions when you cannot.



