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South Carolina Directive to Physicians (Living Will)
Last reviewed: by MicroDocs editorial
A South Carolina Directive to Physicians — sometimes called a living will — is your written instruction to South Carolina doctors about end-of-life care: ventilator, feeding tube, CPR, and the line between treatment that prolongs life and treatment that only prolongs dying.
About the South Carolina Living Will
The directive removes the worst kind of guesswork from your family. Instead of your spouse and your adult children arguing in a South Carolina hospital hallway about what you would have wanted, the answer is on file in your own words and signed by you when you were healthy.
Our template walks you through the choices the South Carolina statute is built around — terminal condition, irreversible condition, comfort care — and produces a clean PDF that goes in your medical chart alongside your Medical Power of Attorney.
Included in both the Core and Premium estate plans, and generated together with the Medical POA and HIPAA Authorization so you have the complete healthcare decision-making set in one sitting.
South Carolina launches soon — what you can do today
Our full South 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 →South Carolina Living Will — Common Questions
No. A DNR (Do Not Resuscitate) is a narrow medical order signed by a South Carolina physician for an immediate hospital encounter. A Directive to Physicians is a broader, advance written statement from you about what end-of-life care you do and don't want, used by South Carolina doctors as guidance across many possible scenarios.
South Carolina accepts the Directive when it's signed in front of two qualified witnesses or a notary. Our Execution Checklist walks you through exactly who qualifies as a witness (someone who is not a beneficiary of your estate, not your healthcare provider, etc.) so the document holds up when it matters.
Yes. A Directive to Physicians can be revoked or replaced at any time while you have the capacity to make medical decisions. You can regenerate the document from your MicroDocs dashboard up to five times within the same plan to capture changes.
South Carolina statute requires healthcare providers to follow a properly executed Directive to Physicians (or to transfer the patient to a provider who will). Putting it in your chart and giving copies to your medical agent and primary care physician is what makes it actually get followed in the moment.
See the full South Carolina estate plan
The South Carolina Living Will is one piece of a complete South Carolina estate-planning binder — will, trust, financial and medical powers of attorney, HIPAA, and more.
Compare Core vs Premium for South Carolina →Other South Carolina documents
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