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Current as of March 28, 2024 | Updated by Findlaw Staff
As used in this subchapter:
(1) “Attending physician” means the physician who has primary responsibility for the treatment and care of the patient;
(2)(A) “Declaration” means a writing executed in accordance with the requirements of § 20-17-202(a).
(B) “Declaration” is an advance directive under § 20-6-102;
(3) “Healthcare provider” means a person who is licensed, certified, or otherwise authorized by the law of this state to administer health care in the ordinary course of business or practice of a profession;
(4) “Healthcare proxy” is a person eighteen (18) years old or older appointed by the patient as attorney-in-fact to make healthcare decisions including the withholding or withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment if a qualified patient, in the opinion of the attending physician, is permanently unconscious, incompetent, or otherwise mentally or physically incapable of communication;
(5) “Life-sustaining treatment” means any medical procedure or intervention that, when administered to a qualified patient, will serve only to prolong the process of dying or to maintain the patient in a condition of permanent unconsciousness;
(6) “Permanently unconscious” means a lasting condition, indefinitely without change in which thought, feeling, sensations, and awareness of self and environment are absent;
(7) “Person” means an individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, association, joint venture, government, governmental subdivision or agency, or any other legal or commercial entity;
(8) “Physician” means an individual licensed to practice medicine in this state;
(9) “Qualified patient” means a patient eighteen (18) or more years of age who has executed a declaration or appointed a healthcare proxy and who has been determined to be in a terminal condition or in a permanently unconscious state by the attending physician and another qualified physician who has examined the patient;
(10) “State” means a state, territory, or possession of the United States, the District of Columbia, or the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; and
(11) “Terminal condition” means an incurable and irreversible condition that, without the administration of life-sustaining treatment, will, in the opinion of the attending physician, result in death within a relatively short time.
Cite this article: FindLaw.com - Arkansas Code Title 20. Public Health and Welfare § 20-17-201. Definitions - last updated March 28, 2024 | https://codes.findlaw.com/ar/title-20-public-health-and-welfare/ar-code-sect-20-17-201/
FindLaw Codes may not reflect the most recent version of the law in your jurisdiction. Please verify the status of the code you are researching with the state legislature before relying on it for your legal needs.
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