Create a free Quebec End-of-Life Care Mandate (Mandat en prévision de soins de fin de vie) under the Loi concernant les soins de fin de vie (RLRQ c S-32.0001) and arts. 2166-2174 CCQ. Designate a mandatary to make health care and end-of-life decisions on your behalf, including the option to authorize an advance MAID request (Bill 38, 2023). Includes CPR directives, artificial life support wishes, palliative care preferences, and mandatory accounting provisions (art. 2166.1 CCQ). Download as PDF or Word.
What Is a End-of-Life Care Mandate — Quebec (Mandat en prévision de soins de fin de vie)?
A Quebec End-of-Life Care Mandate (Mandat en prévision de soins de fin de vie) is a specialized legal document that combines the protection mandate framework of the Code civil du Québec (arts. 2166-2174) with the end-of-life rights established by the Loi concernant les soins de fin de vie (RLRQ c S-32.0001). It is designed to designate a trusted mandatary who will have the legal authority to make health care and end-of-life decisions on behalf of the mandator when they are no longer capable of expressing their wishes.
This document occupies a unique space in Quebec's end-of-life planning framework. While advance medical directives provide direct instructions to health care professionals about specific treatments, the end-of-life care mandate creates a legal relationship with a designated person who has ongoing authority and responsibility to advocate for the mandator, communicate their wishes, and make real-time decisions that cannot always be anticipated in advance directives.
The mandate is governed by the protection mandate provisions of the Code civil du Québec (arts. 2166-2174), which require court homologation before the mandate takes effect. The mandatary designated in the mandate must petition the Superior Court for homologation, presenting medical and psychosocial evaluations confirming the mandator's incapacity. Only after homologation does the mandatary have the legal authority to act on behalf of the mandator.
A particularly significant aspect of the end-of-life care mandate is its relationship to medical aid in dying (aide médicale à mourir / MAID). Following the landmark 2023 amendments to the Loi concernant les soins de fin de vie through Bill 38, it became possible for a mandatary to request MAID on behalf of an incapacitated mandator who has explicitly authorized this in their mandate. This provision allows persons with progressive illnesses like early-stage Alzheimer's disease to arrange for MAID in advance, ensuring their expressed wishes can be honored even after they lose decision-making capacity.
The mandatory accounting provisions introduced by article 2166.1 CCQ since November 2022 also apply to end-of-life care mandates. Every such mandate must designate a person to receive the mandatary's accounting and specify the frequency of such accounting, creating a transparency and accountability mechanism even in the health care context.
Unlike the trusted person designated in advance medical directives, a mandatary under an end-of-life care mandate has active decision-making authority. The mandatary can consent to or refuse treatments, authorize diagnostic procedures, negotiate care plans with medical teams, and, if so authorized, request MAID. The mandatary acts under the civil law obligations of articles 2138 and 2139 CCQ, requiring them to act with prudence, diligence, honesty, and loyalty in the mandator's best interest.
When Do You Need a End-of-Life Care Mandate — Quebec (Mandat en prévision de soins de fin de vie)?
An end-of-life care mandate is most valuable for persons who want to ensure that a specific, trusted individual will have legal authority to advocate for their health care preferences and end-of-life wishes. It is particularly important for people who have strong, specific wishes about their end-of-life care that they want a named advocate to enforce — not just document for medical personnel to discover and potentially override.
It is especially critical for persons with early-stage progressive neurological conditions such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, or ALS who are currently capable of making decisions but anticipate future incapacity. For those who wish to include an advance authorization for medical aid in dying under the 2023 Bill 38 amendments, the mandate is the legal vehicle for this authorization, particularly when made by notarial act.
The mandate is also important for persons with complex medical situations involving multiple specialists and health care providers, where having a legally authorized advocate who can make consistent decisions across all providers is essential. Persons whose family dynamics might create conflict about end-of-life decisions benefit from having a mandatary with clear, court-sanctioned authority.
Like advance medical directives, the end-of-life care mandate should be prepared while the mandator is fully capable, and should be reviewed and updated following major health changes, changes in personal values, or when the designated mandatary's circumstances change.
What to Include in Your End-of-Life Care Mandate — Quebec (Mandat en prévision de soins de fin de vie)
A valid Quebec end-of-life care mandate under arts. 2166-2174 CCQ and the Loi concernant les soins de fin de vie must include several essential elements. The mandator's complete identification — including full legal name, date of birth, address, and optionally the RAMQ health insurance number — is the starting point.
The designation of the mandatary for health care is the central element, specifying the mandatary's full identification, their relationship to the mandator, and the scope of their authority over health care decisions. A replacement mandatary should be designated as required by article 2174 CCQ, to ensure continuity of care advocacy.
The mandate must clearly articulate the mandator's health care wishes: accepted and refused treatments, directives regarding CPR and artificial life support, and since the 2023 amendments, any advance authorization for MAID under arts. 29-29.1 of the Loi concernant les soins de fin de vie. If MAID is authorized, the mandate must specify the precise medical conditions under which the mandatary may exercise this authorization.
Palliative care and comfort care wishes, including pain management preferences and preferred place of care at end of life, must be included. Personal, religious, spiritual, and cultural preferences that should guide the mandatary's decisions are also important elements.
Under article 2166.1 CCQ (mandatory since November 2022), the mandate must designate a person to receive the mandatary's financial and management accounting and specify the frequency of reporting. This accountability mechanism applies even to health-focused mandates.
Regarding form, the mandate must comply with article 2166 CCQ: it must be made by notarial act en minute or signed before two witnesses who meet the strict eligibility requirements of article 2167 CCQ. For mandates including MAID authorization, notarial form is strongly recommended. The mandate takes effect only after court homologation upon proof of the mandator's incapacity.
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