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authors: Tamayo Velázquez MI ,Simón Lorda P, Yordanka Krastev, Bernal M last update: 02/05/2012
| | | 1 |   | The Commonwealth of Australia is a country in the southern hemisphere comprising the mainland of the world's smallest continent, the major island of Tasmania, and numerous other islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans. The estimated population in Australia is 21.3 million.
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Currently, there is no national uniformity of Advance Directives in Australia. Depending on the state, there are different laws regulating Advance Directives.
Advance Directives in Australia can be named as:
Advance Directive
Advance Health Directive
Advance Health Care Directive
There is no official format of AD in Australia.
There is no official procedure for or registry of AD in Australia.
Generally, there is no data on the use of ADs in Australia because most people complete them in their own homes, often using forms downloaded from the Internet or photocopied.
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Three Australian states (Victoria, South Australia and Queensland) and two Territories (Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory) now have legislation that provides for AD. New South Wales, Tasmania and Western Australia do not have similar legislation, but ADs may still be valid under common (judge-made) law. In different States, there are different acting legal documents Even though each state has
its own regulation for Advance Care Directives, efforts to elaborate a national
regulation are being carried out and recently a National
Framework for Advanced Care Directives has been published in 2011 as the
first step towards the achievement of this aim.
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| | 4 |  | There is no official procedure for or registry of AD in Australia. A register was set up in MedicAlert Foundation where people from all Australian States can lodge their AD paying an annual subscription fee. In some hospitals and aged care facilities, there are mechanisms to record whether a patient or resident has an advance directive. AD could be kept in a safe place at home, in a bank vault or a lawyer’s office. Because of that, in an emergency, it can be difficult to access the AD and to ensure a person’s wishes will be known. The National Framework for Advance Care Directives (2011) does not
recommend the establishment of registers because of its high cost and low
reliability, and instead promotes the inclusion of ACD in the electronic file
of patients, carry personal wallet cards, or use magnets that affix a copy of
ACD form to the fridge. | | 
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 | There is no official format of AD in Australia. Adv ance directives are designed in different ways and different forms are appropriate in different contexts. There are different forms for advance directives across Australia. To be legally valid advanced directives must meet the specific criteria for each State/Territory. The existing forms of advance directives are as follows:
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Research projects
- PublicationsBooks
- Graham S., Hampshire A. , Hindmarsh E., Squires B. and Wall S., My health, my future, my choice : an advance care directive for New South Wales, Annandale, NSW: Advance Care Directive Association, 2006.
Book Chapters - Stewart C., Advance directives: Disputes and Dilemmas , in Freckleton, I. and Petersen, K. (eds.), Disputes and Dilemmas in Health Law, Federation Press, Sydney, 2006 pp.39-42.
- Kerridge IH, McPhee J, Lowe M, Flynn B. Advance directives. In: Freckelton I, Petersen K, editors. Controversies in health law. Sydney: The Federation Press; 1999: 302.
Articles
Links
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