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Mental Capacity Act Practitioners Forum

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Presentation on theme: "Mental Capacity Act Practitioners Forum"— Presentation transcript:

1 Mental Capacity Act Practitioners Forum
Lasting Power of Attorney

2 This presentation will cover:
A close look at Lasting Powers of Attorney (LPA); Safeguards and benefits in relation to the LPA role.

3 What is an LPA? LPA role established by Mental Capacity Act 2005 (MCA); LPA replaces Enduring Powers of Attorney (EPA) as the way of appointing decision makers for a time when a person may lack capacity; Only EPAs made and signed prior to 1st October 2007 can still be used.

4 What is an LPA? LPAs increase the range and type of decisions a person can authorise others to make on their behalf; There are two types of LPA: i) financial and property and ii) health and welfare; They are separate types with separate forms, and cannot be combined in one document.

5 Who can make an LPA? The person who makes the LPA is known as the ‘donor’; The donor must be aged 18 or over; They must have the mental capacity to understand the purpose and effect of making the LPA; Only individuals can make an LPA, not couples; The LPA replaces unregistered EPA.

6 Why make an LPA? It gives the donor the choice to plan for a time when they may lack capacity to make decisions for themselves in the future; It enables the donor to choose trusted people to make decisions on their behalf; It includes important safeguards for the donor; The Attorney (person appointed) must pay regard to the Mental Capacity Act 2005 Code of Practice (2007).

7 Best Interests Attorneys are governed by the principles of the MCA;
Before any decision an attorney must first be satisfied that it is in the donor’s best interests; Attorneys must have regard to the MCA Code of Practice.

8 LPA – Property and Financial Affairs
An attorney can make any decision the donor would make in respect of finances and property; The decisions can be subject to restrictions and conditions imposed by the donor within the LPA document; Generally, attorneys will: pay regular bills; manage income and expenditure; buy or sell property; manage investments or even carry on a business.

9 LPA – Health and Welfare (1)
Attorneys for health and welfare may make decisions that the person would normally make including: where they live and with whom; accessing medical records; deciding what they wear; deciding what they eat.

10 LPA – Health and Welfare (2)
They can also consent to or refuse to consent to: life sustaining treatment; artificial nutrition or hydration; any decision a doctor considers necessary to sustain life; The LPA must specify the donor’s intentions and instructions

11 Life Sustaining Treatment
Who does the donor want to make decisions about life-sustaining treatment? Option A –give attorney/s authority to give or refuse consent to life-sustaining treatment on the person’s behalf. If the donor chooses this option, their attorney/s can speak to doctors on their behalf as if they were the person; Option B – do not give attorney/s authority to give or refuse consent to life-sustaining treatment on their behalf. If the donor chooses this option, the doctors will take into account the views of the attorneys and of people who are interested in their welfare as well as any written statement they may have made, where it is practical and appropriate.

12 Back Door Euthanasia? NO. Section 62 of the Act emphasises that nothing done in the Act effects laws relating to murder, manslaughter or section 2 of the Suicide Act 1961; Section 4(5) of the Act states that no one can make a decision about life sustaining treatment if they are motivated by a desire to bring about death.

13 How are attorneys appointed?
As a single attorney; More than one attorney, to act: Together; together and independently; together in respect of some matters and together and independently in respect of others; Replacement attorney.

14 LPA Forms (1) LPA forms were revised in July 2015 and are available to create online or download to print as a paper version; The donor and attorney/s will need to read all the information provided, see Make, register or end a lasting power of attorney. It can be read to someone unable to read / see.

15 LPA Forms (2) The LPA forms are divided up into different sections:
The donor’s statement; The attorneys ; How should attorneys make decisions? Replacement attorneys; Life sustaining treatment (health and welfare only) / When can your attorneys make decisions? (financial and property affairs only); People to notify when the LPA is registered; Preferences and instructions; Your legal rights and responsibilities; Signature: donor; Signature: certificate provider; Signature: attorney or replacement.

16 Notifiable Parties In Section 6, the donor can include: people to notify when the LPA is registered. This is up to five named parties who are to be informed at the point of registration. However, they do not have to choose people to notify if they do not want.

17 Certification Process
The certificate provider confirms that the donor’s understands the LPA; There are two different categories of certificate provider, but only one is required to complete the form.

18 Certificate Provider The certificate provider signs to confirm they’ve discussed the lasting power of attorney (LPA) with the donor, that the donor understands what they’re doing and that nobody is forcing them to do it. The ‘certificate provider’ should be either: someone who has known the donor personally for at least two years, such as a friend, neighbour, colleague or former colleague; someone with relevant professional skills, such as the donor’s GP, a healthcare professional or a solicitor. An attorney cannot also be a certificate provider.

19 Registration Process - 1
Registration costs £110; Objections on factual grounds must be made to the Office of the Public Guardian, for example: bankruptcy; death of attorney; death of donor.

20 Registration Process - 2
Objections on prescribed grounds must be made to the Court of Protection, for example: the person objecting does not believe the donor had capacity to make an LPA; the donor revoked the LPA when they had capacity; fraud or undue pressure was used to induce the donor to make an LPA; the attorney is not acting in the donors best interests.

21 Safeguards and benefits
Choice of notifiable parties; Certification process; Attorney must have regard to the Code of Practice; Restrictions and conditions can be made in the LPA; Option of replacement attorney.

22 What should the donor do? (1)
Always get a copy of the LPA; It cannot be used unless it is registered (this takes 8-10 weeks); It cannot be used if an objection is lodged; Remember an LPA can be registered before it is needed.

23 What should the donor do? (2)
Check a Health and Welfare LPA against any Advanced Decision to Refuse Medical Treatment; If the advanced decision was made before the LPA, the LPA overturns it; If the advanced decision was made after an LPA, it takes priority.

24 What should the donor do? (3)
A property and financial affairs LPA can be used as soon as it is registered, in other words before the donor loses capacity, as well as afterwards; A health and welfare LPA can only be used when the donor loses capacity; A valid attorney is always the decision maker for LPA approved actions.

25 Further Information and Forms
Make a lasting power of attorney Office of the Public Guardian All forms available including application to waive or delay fees; Although not required by law, it is quite a complex business and simple mistakes can invalidate the LPA. Independent legal advice is in the donor’s own interests.


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