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North Carolina Medical Power of Attorney
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A North Carolina Medical Power of Attorney names the person who speaks for you with doctors and hospitals when you can't speak for yourself. This is the document that decides whether your spouse, your adult child, or someone else is the one a North Carolina ICU calls in the middle of the night.
About the North Carolina Medical POA
Without a Medical POA on file, North Carolina hospitals fall back to a statutory "surrogate" hierarchy — typically spouse, then adult children, then parents. That's fine in straightforward cases, and disastrous in blended families, estranged relationships, or any situation where the "obvious" person isn't the person you actually trust.
Our template names a primary medical agent and up to two backups, captures any specific instructions you want them to follow (transfusions, ventilator, end-of-life), and is generated as a printable PDF you sign in front of witnesses and a notary.
The Medical POA is included in both the Core and Premium plans, paired with a HIPAA Authorization (so the agent can actually receive the medical information they need to decide) and a Directive to Physicians (your written end-of-life wishes). North Carolina hospitals expect to see all three as a set.
North Carolina launches soon — what you can do today
Our full North Carolina estate-planning binder isn't live yet. Reserve your spot above and you'll be notified the moment it launches. In the meantime, three of our documents work in every state today — HIPAA Authorization, Execution Checklist, and Notary Guide — bundled together for $49.
Get the Universal Documents bundle →North Carolina Medical POA — Common Questions
Yes — the template is drafted to comply with the North Carolina statutory medical power-of-attorney form. Once it's signed in front of two qualified witnesses (or a notary) it goes in your medical chart and controls who the North Carolina hospital talks to about your care.
No, but they work together. A Medical Power of Attorney names the person who decides. A Directive to Physicians (sometimes called a living will) writes down what you want them to decide — for example whether you want to be kept on a ventilator if recovery is impossible. Our plan generates both.
Pick one person you trust to follow your wishes even when family members disagree, who is reachable by phone in a crisis, and who lives close enough to physically come to a North Carolina hospital if needed. Most people name a spouse first and an adult child as backup, but the right answer is the person who will actually do what you would have wanted.
Only if you signed a separate HIPAA Authorization. Our plan includes one (and you can also buy the $49 Universal Documents bundle on its own if all you need today is HIPAA). Without it, your medical agent can make decisions but can't always see the test results those decisions depend on.
See the full North Carolina estate plan
The North Carolina Medical POA is one piece of a complete North Carolina estate-planning binder — will, trust, financial and medical powers of attorney, HIPAA, and more.
Compare Core vs Premium for North Carolina →Other North Carolina documents
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