New Hampshire healthcare directives: Advance Directive (combines Living Will + Healthcare POA).
Published May 7, 2026
## Healthcare directives in New Hampshire
Healthcare directives let you make decisions NOW about medical care you want — or don't want — in case you become unable to communicate them later. New Hampshire recognizes Advance Directive (combines Living Will .
### New Hampshire framework
Advance Directive (combines Living Will + Healthcare POA).
## Two main types of healthcare directives
**1. Living Will / Healthcare Directive.** Written statement of what medical treatments you want or refuse if terminally ill or permanently unconscious.
Common topics:
- Resuscitation (CPR)
- Mechanical ventilation
- Artificial nutrition and hydration
- Tube feeding
- Pain management
- Specific treatments to refuse (dialysis, blood transfusion, antibiotics)
- Comfort care preferences
- Organ donation
**2. Healthcare Power of Attorney / Healthcare Proxy / Healthcare Surrogate.** Designates an **agent** to make medical decisions when you can't.
The agent can:
- Speak with doctors
- Consent to or refuse treatments
- Choose facilities and providers
- Receive HIPAA-protected medical info
- Make end-of-life decisions
- Authorize pain management
Most modern statutes allow these to be combined in a single "Advance Directive" document.
## POLST / MOLST / MOST / POST
**POLST** (Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment) and similar variations (MOLST in NY/MA, MOST in NC/NM, POST in TN/IN/WV) are MEDICAL ORDERS — signed by both patient and physician — covering specific end-of-life treatments. Different from Living Will / Healthcare POA:
- **Living Will** = patient's wishes; advisory; for use when incapacitated
- **POLST** = doctor's orders; binding; for medical professionals to follow immediately
POLST is most common for seriously ill patients and elderly people in nursing facilities.
## Execution requirements
Most state directives require:
- Written form
- Signed by the patient
- Witnessed (typically 2 witnesses, often barred from being agent / healthcare provider / heir)
- Sometimes notarized
- Specific statutory language for some elements
Failing to follow execution requirements can void the directive entirely.
## Choosing a healthcare agent
**Pick someone who:**
- You trust completely
- Will be available in a crisis
- Lives close enough to come quickly
- Can make hard decisions under pressure
- Will respect your wishes (not impose their own values)
- Can advocate against family pressure
- Has the time and emotional capacity
**Pick a backup** — agents die, get sick, become unavailable.
**Talk to your agent** — share your values, fears, religious beliefs, treatment preferences. The directive is a starting point; the conversation makes it work.
## What healthcare agents can typically NOT do
- Override a fully-conscious patient's decisions
- Make decisions about civil commitment
- Authorize sterilization (in some states)
- Authorize psychosurgery
- Withhold mechanical ventilation in some states unless explicitly authorized
- Authorize abortion (in some states)
- Override specific provisions of the directive
## When a directive takes effect
Healthcare directives generally activate when:
- Your physician determines you lack capacity to make medical decisions, OR
- The specific triggering condition (terminal illness, permanent unconsciousness) is met
Two physicians often must agree before life-sustaining treatment can be withdrawn.
## Recognition between states
Most states honor advance directives executed in other states (sometimes only if they meet that state's requirements). Travel-heavy people should consider:
- Executing directives in multiple states where they spend time
- Carrying digital copies
- Registering with state databases (where available)
- Keeping copies with primary doctor, family, agent
## HIPAA authorization
Don't forget — your agent needs **HIPAA authorization** to access your medical records. Many advance-directive forms include this; if not, file a separate HIPAA release.
## Mental health directives
Some states have separate mental-health directives addressing:
- Psychiatric treatment preferences
- Medication choices
- Hospitalization preferences
- ECT consent
- Trusted advocate for mental-health treatment
These are separate from general healthcare directives and have their own execution requirements.
## What you should do
Every adult in New Hampshire should have BOTH a Living Will (or equivalent) AND Healthcare POA — even teenagers about to turn 18. Most New Hampshire estate-planning attorneys offer flat-fee "basic estate planning packages" that include healthcare directives + financial POA + simple will + HIPAA release. Many state hospitals and senior services offer free templates. Don't wait for an emergency.
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*This guide is general information about New Hampshire law as of early 2026 and is not legal advice. Healthcare-directive law varies by state. Talk to a licensed New Hampshire estate-planning attorney about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.