ortizgosalialaw.com
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Practice Areas
    • Estate Planning
    • IRS Tax Controversy
    • Foreign Accounts and Income Reporting (FBAR)
    • State & Local Tax Contoversy
    • Business Services
  • Our Team
    • Vijay Gosalia
    • Ramón E Ortiz-Vélez
    • Nicole Diarra
    • Grace Moso
  • Blogs
    • Business Planning
    • Estate Planning
    • Tax Law
  • Contact Us
  • Resources
    • Helpful Links
    • Estate Planning Instruments
    • Newsletters
    • Client Reviews
Select Page

Three Legal Strategies When Facing a Major Health Event

Oct 9, 2018

What You and Your Family Need to Know

Receiving a health diagnosis or learning that you need to undergo major surgery can cause substantial disruption in your day-to-day life. During this time, the last thing you may want to think about is estate planning.

Although you may have many things going through your head at the moment, now is a crucial time to make sure your estate plan is in order. Proactive planning can help put your mind at ease and let you focus on your treatment. Let’s review your estate plan together to make sure each of the following important components is up to date and reflects your current goals and wishes.

Healthcare documents
Your healthcare documents include your powers of attorney, advance directives, and HIPAA authorization. These documents let you appoint someone to receive information about your medical condition and to even help you make medical decisions if you’re unable to do so. You probably already know which of your loved ones you’d like at the helm if a situation arises. But whoever you’ve chosen needs to be given the explicit authority to act so that you can rest easy knowing they’ll be there to make decisions if you need them.

Financial power of attorney
While a healthcare agent or proxy can make decisions on your behalf in medical scenarios, a financial power of attorney concerns your money, investments, bills, and taxes. Although it relates to different decisions, it is just as important a designation. Having this document in place can give a trusted person (such as a spouse, child, or friend) the authority to help you with your finances and property so these issues don’t have to be a distraction while you focus on your health.

Updated trusts
An up-to-date and fully-funded trust lets you focus on your health while your successor trustee handles the affairs of your trust, which could include most, if not all of your assets. In this case, you’ll still receive the benefit of your trust but your successor trustee will manage the trust on your behalf. If there’s not sufficient time to fully fund a trust, then an up-to-date will can at least put you in control of who receives what upon your death. When time is of the essence a will may be the only realistic planning tool, but if you already have a trust it can be a relatively easy process to update and fully fund it.

A little planning goes a long way when it comes to medically-trying times. As busy as you may be when you’re handling your own medical issues or the medical issues of a loved one, even one conversation can be enough for us to define and implement the estate planning documents that will help you feel more prepared for whatever comes next. Please reach out to us so we can chat about your needs and helping you obtain peace of mind.

Recent Posts

  • What to Bring to Your First Meeting with the Estate Planning Attorney
  • Are Any of These 11 Mistakes Lurking in Your Estate Plan?
  • Wills, Trusts & Dying Intestate: How They Differ
  • Do you really need a trust?
  • Your 2018 Taxes – Get Started Now

Archives

  • May 2019
  • December 2018
  • October 2018
  • July 2018
  • May 2018
  • April 2018
  • August 2016
  • July 2016
  • June 2016
  • April 2016
  • March 2016
  • February 2016
  • January 2016
  • August 2015
  • July 2015
  • June 2015
  • April 2015
  • Facebook
  • X
  • RSS

Designed by Elegant Themes | Powered by WordPress