Advance care planning
Advance care planning is ongoing and dynamic, because a person’s preferences may change over time as their health changes. It may be initiated at any point, and may involve people who are currently healthy. In advance care planning, a mentally capable person identifies their substitute decision-maker by confirming the automatic substitute decision-maker from the hierarchy list in the Health Care Consent Act or by choosing someone else using a “Power of Attorney for Personal Care.” The hierarchy outlined in Ontario’s Health Care Consent Act is as follows (note: numbers 1 to 3 occur if people are legally appointed to these roles):
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Guardian of the person with authority for health decisions
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Attorney for personal care with authority for health decisions
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Representative appointed by the Consent and Capacity Board
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Spouse or partner
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Child or parent or a children’s aid society (person with right of custody)
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Parent with right of access
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Brother or sister
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Any other relative
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Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee
The capable person then shares their wishes, values, and beliefs with the substitute decision-maker, and discusses how they would like to be cared for if they become mentally incapable of giving or refusing consent.
Substitute decision-maker
A substitute decision-maker is a person who makes care and treatment decisions on another person’s behalf if or when that person becomes mentally incapable of making decisions for themselves. The substitute decision-maker makes decisions based on their understanding of the person’s wishes, or, if these are unknown or not applicable, makes choices that are consistent with the person’s known values and beliefs and in their best interests.
Wishes, values, and beliefs
A person’s wishes, values, and beliefs convey who the person is, how they would make choices for themselves, what they think is important, and what would influence their decision-making. Values are the principles on which a person’s morality and/or spirituality is based. If a person is mentally incapable of making choices for themselves, the substitute decision-maker (not the health care professional) interprets their wishes.
Health care consent
Health care consent refers to an informed and contextualized decision involving a mentally capable person and a health care provider as outlined in the Ontario Health Care Consent Act. Health care providers who propose a treatment must obtain informed consent from a mentally capable patient (or their substitute decision-maker, if they do not have the mental capacity). A discussion about consent must address the person’s present condition; available treatment options; risks, benefits, side effects, and alternatives to treatment; and what would happen without the proposed treatment.
Capacity or mental capacity
Under Ontario’s Health Care Consent Act, a person is capable with respect to a health care decision if they have the ability to understand the information that is needed to make a decision and have the ability to appreciate the consequences of the decision or lack of decision. Capacity is issue- or task-specific. A person’s specific capacity to understand information and appreciate the decisions that must be made should be respected so that their mental capacity for a specific health care decision is recognized. A person may be capable with respect to making some health care decisions, but incapable with respect to others. If a person is incapable with respect to making a health care decision, the substitute decision maker can give or refuse consent on the person’s behalf.