Health Care Providers
Indiana Advance Directives
An advance directive is a legal document that can be completed by all adults at any age or stage of health that clearly communicates a patient’s preferences for treatment and allows the patient to appoint a healthcare representative to speak or consent to life-prolonging or palliative care procedures. The advance directive can now be signed both on paper and electronically by patients and their witnesses. As of July 1, 2021, Indiana no longer mandates the use of an official form for an advance directive.
Indiana POST
The Indiana POST Program, or Indiana’s version of the National POLST, is an advance care planning tool that helps ensure treatment preferences are honored. It is designed for patients with advanced chronic or terminal illness or frailties. Preferences for life sustaining treatments including resuscitation, medical interventions (e.g., comfort care, hospitalization, intubation, mechanical ventilation), antibiotics, and artificial nutrition are documented as medical orders on the POST form. It must be reviewed and signed by a physician, advance practice nurse, or physician assistant to be activated and can be modified by the patient at any time. This form transfers throughout the health care system and the orders are valid in all settings. As of July 1, 2023, both the Indiana POST and Indiana Out-of-Hospital DNR Order Form (available below) may be signed by a proxy decision-maker if the patient lacks decisional capacity and there is no legally appointed health care representative.
Download the Indiana POST Form
Documents & Resources
POST Guidance for Health Care Professionals
This guidance book provides information to health care providers about how to use the Indiana POST program.
The New Indiana POST Program
An October 2013 video of lecture about the Indiana POST Program featuring Susan Hickman, PhD.
Out-of-Hospital DNR Order Form (English)
As of July 1, 2021, the Indiana Out-of-Hospital DNR Order form can be signed by a physician, advanced practice registered nurse, or physician assistant.
Out-of-Hospital DNR Order Form (Spanish)
This translation of the Indiana Out-of-Hospital Do Not Resuscitate order is provided for educational purposes only. An English version must be signed.
POST Fact Sheet
This cover sheet is designed to accompany the POST form and provides introductory information for patients and families.
POST Revocation Checklist
A checklist outlining the steps required to revoke the Indiana POST.
Indiana Department of Homeland Security POST Information
An educational website containing information about the Indiana POST Program for emergency medical responders.
Indiana POST and Advance Directives for EMS
An educational packet for EMS developed by the Indiana Fire Chiefs Association EMS Section and the IPPC with the approval of the Indiana DHS.
Indiana POST Form
The Indiana POST Program is an advance care planning tool that helps ensure treatment preferences are honored.
All Translated POST Forms
Here you can choose from several languages to download translated versions of the POST form.
Frequently Asked Questions
Click on the questions below to find answers to our Frequently Asked Questions.
What is an advance directive?
An advance directive is a legal medical document stating one’s treatment preferences for life-prolonging or palliative care procedures and designating a healthcare representative (HCR) to make medical decisions on your behalf if you are unable. For more information about Advance Directives, go to the “Patients and Families” tab.
Following SEA 204, what are the updates to the AD process?
- Indiana will no longer require the use of an official AD form but will provide a list of sample AD templates approved for use in Indiana
- It will update the signing requirements for an AD.
- Consolidates the roles and “standards of conduct” of the healthcare representative and power of attorney.
For more information, view a summary of the new policy here.
What is the difference between an advance directive and the Indiana POST form?
An advance directive (AD) is a legal document that adults fill out to communicate their medical decision and treatment preferences, values, and designate a healthcare representative or surrogate decision maker.
The Indiana POST is a medical order for anyone regardless of age who has chronic or serious illness that conveys specific medical treatments and is filled out by the healthcare provider rather than the individual and can be used by emergency responders. However, it does not include the use of a surrogate healthcare representative.
For more information about the differences between an Advance Directive and POST, watch this video from National POLST website.
Who should have an advance directive?
Regardless of age or health status, it is preferred that everyone file an advance directive, or at least start that conversation with their family members and/or healthcare providers.
What is the POST form?
Who should have a POST form?
Is a POST form required for all patients?
Completion of the POST form is voluntary, and it is encouraged for seriously ill patients so that all participating in a patient’s care can readily know the medical treatment the patient wishes at the end of life. Individuals are encouraged to complete a POST form when their treating clinician would not be surprised if the patient died within 1-2 years. Completion of POST is also highly recommended for hospitalized patients being discharged to nursing homes or to their own home with hospice or home health care. Completion of POST is also strongly recommended for nursing home residents. However, the use of a POST form is always voluntary.
Which form should the patient complete? An advance directive? The POST form?
The Indiana POST form is recommended for patients who are seriously ill and whose death within 1-2 years would not be a surprise to the patient’s treating clinician. Because the POST form is a medical order, of the three forms, the POST form is most likely to ensure that the patient receives the treatment that he or she wants. For patients with advanced chronic progressive illness, advanced frailty, or terminal conditions, it would be entirely appropriate for the patient to complete an advance directive and a POST form. The completion of these forms maximizes the possibility that the patient will have his or her end-of-life treatment preferences known and respected. In addition to completing the forms, the patient needs to be sure to discuss his/her preferences with the person that he or she designated as his/her legally authorized representative.
Does the patient need a DNR order if he/she has a POST form?
Does a treating practitioner need to sign the POST form?
What if the treating practitioner does not want to sign a POST form but the patient or incapacitated patient’s legal agent wants one?
Your options in this situation: 1) the treating clinician can seek out other health care professionals to learn about the legal protection the form provides to the patient, legal agent, treating clinician and health care facility when validly completed; 2) Indiana law allows any treating physician, advanced practice nurse, or physician assistant to sign a POST form; or 3) the patient or patient’s legal agent can transfer the patient’s care to another treating clinician who is willing to complete a POST form for the patient.
Can a social worker, nurse or other health care professional prepare the POST form?
Yes. Social workers, nurses, chaplains, and other health care professionals designated by the treating clinician can prepare the form with patients, their legally appointed representatives, or the appropriate proxy based on the Indiana hierarchy (only if there is no legally appointed representative—these are people like the spouse, an adult child, etc.). The person preparing the form should sign his/her name in the space provided for the preparer on the back of the form.
To activate the POST, a physician, advanced practice nurse or physician assistant must review and sign it to confirm the orders are reasonable and medically appropriate for the individual before signing it.
What parts of the form are required for it to be valid?
The Indiana POST form must include at least this to be valid: Patient name; code status order (Section A); treating clinician signature with date (Section H); and patient, legal representative, or proxy signature with date (Section E). The form must also be in English.
Should the POST form be completed or voided without a conversation with the patient or his/her representative?
No. The POST form should not be completed, changed, or voided unless there is a conversation
with either the patient or, if the patient lacks capacity, his/her legally authorized representative or proxy (if there is no legally authorized representative). The purpose of the form is to ensure that the patient’s wishes for care at the end of life are followed so a conversation must take place.
When does the POST form have to be reviewed?
What if a patient or legally authorized representative changes his/her mind about the preferences documented on the POST form?
Requests for alternative treatment should be honored because a patient can change his or her mind at any time. The representative can revoke the POST form only if the patient lacks decisional capacity. A proxy can also revoke if there is no representative.
If a patient, representative, or proxy wishes to revoke the POST form, do this by documenting the decision on the form with a signature and date, physical cancellation or destruction of the form, or a verbal expression of the intent to revoke. The change takes effect immediately when it is communicated to the health care provider.
The health care provider is responsible for notifying the treating physician, advanced practice nurse or physician assistant who must then document information about the revocation including the time, date, and place of revocation and when they first learned of the revocation in the patient’s medical record. The POST form should be canceled by making a note in the patient’s medical record. The patient’s health care providers and the treating clinician who initially signed the POST should also be notified.
Can the legally authorized representative or proxy change the POST form?
Yes. A representative or proxy may revoke/revise a patient’s POST if the patient lacks decisional capacity and must act in good faith and in accordance with the patient’s known or implied intentions. If the patient’s intentions are unknown, the representative or proxy may revoke the POST if acting in the patient’s best interest. A representative or proxy must always attempt to comply with the patient’s instructions, desires, preferences as stated by the patient or documented on POST.
Should the POST form be used to guide daily care decisions?
Are health care providers required to comply with the orders on the POST form?
- a) believes the POST form was not validly executed under Indiana law;
- b) believes in good faith that the POST form has been revoked by the patient or their legally authorized representative;
- c) believes in good faith that the patient or their legally authorized representative has made a request for alternative treatment;
- d) believes it would be medically inappropriate to provide the intervention on the patient’s POST form; or
- e) has religious or moral beliefs that conflict with the POST form orders. If the health care provider is unable to implement or carry out the orders because of their own personal religious or moral beliefs, they are required to coordinate the transfer of care for the patient to another health care provider who is able to carry out the orders. If this is not possible, further direction is provided in the Indiana POST Act regarding the appropriate next steps.
The Indiana POST Act provides legal protection for health care providers who comply with the orders on POST forms. In the law, health care providers are not subject to civil or criminal liability for good faith compliance with or reliance upon POST forms.
Where should the original POST form be kept?
What about Persons with Significant Physical and/ or Developmental Disabilities?
When should a POST form be considered for Persons with Significant Physical and/ or Developmental Disabilities?
- The person has a disease process (not just a stable disability) that is terminal
- The person is experiencing a significant decline in health (such as frequent aspiration pneumonias)
- The person is in a palliative care or hospice program
- The person’s level of functioning has become severely impaired as a result of a deteriorating health condition when intervention will not significantly impact the process of decline
Who can complete the POST form?
Are copies of the POST form valid?
Are out of state POST forms valid in Indiana?
Yes, forms that are substantially similar to the Indiana POST form are valid in Indiana and may be honored. The form must be the other state’s official form and it must be signed by the physician, advance practice nurse, or physician assistant along with the signature of a qualified patient, representative, or proxy. The form must also be in English. To verify if the form is the official state version, visit www.polst.org .