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Advance care planning for dementia and Alzheimer’s means talking early about values, writing down medical and daily care preferences, and naming a trusted person to make decisions if you cannot. Starting now gives your family clear direction and gives you more control over the care you receive.
Why timing matters
My friend Miguel didn’t think about advance care planning until his father was rushed to the hospital. In the chaos, they had to guess about his father’s wishes while juggling bank accounts, insurance, and phone passwords. “If we’d talked about this sooner,” Miguel told me later, “we would have been more present with him.” Stories like his are familiar in my work with therapists and doctors. Waiting until a crisis can leave families scrambling. Planning at the correct times gives you and your loved ones peace of mind.
End of life planning checklist
Age 18 and up: get started
- Create a basic plan. Once you’re legally an adult, name a health care proxy, someone who can make decisions if you can’t. Fill out a simple advance directive using your state’s form.
- Think about values. Consider what quality of life means to you. Do you value independence, comfort, or longevity most?
- Share your choices. Let your chosen proxy and at least one family member know where to find your documents.
Life events: revisit and expand
- Marriage or partnership: Talk with your spouse or partner about your wishes and theirs. Update your proxy if necessary.
- New baby or adoption: As your family grows, think about guardianship, financial responsibilities, and who would step in if you were unable to care for a child.
- Buying a home or major asset: Update legal paperwork to reflect who can handle financial decisions if you’re incapacitated.
- Serious diagnosis or surgery: Review your preferences for treatments and update your directive to reflect your current condition and prognosis. The National Institute on Aging suggests doing this whenever your health changes.
- Divorce or death of a proxy: Choose a new person if your original proxy can no longer serve.
Age milestones: deepen the plan
- Every decade: At ages 30, 40, 50 and beyond, revisit your directives. Life experience often changes our views about what matters most.
- In your fifties: Many people start to care for aging parents around this time. Use their experiences to reflect on your own wishes and talk openly with siblings.
- In your sixties and seventies: Focus on specifics like living arrangements, long‑term care preferences, and whether you’d like to stay at home if possible. Review financial and digital account access with trusted family members.
Any time life changes: keep the conversation going
- After a move: Laws about advance directives vary by state. Review your documents if you relocate to ensure they meet local requirements.
- After loss: The death of a loved one often prompts new reflections. Update your plan to reflect what you’ve learned.
- Every two to three years: Even without major events, set a reminder to review your paperwork regularly. Your feelings and relationships can change with time.
Tips for making these talks easier
- Start with What Matters Most to you in everyday life. For example, share what makes you happiest on a good day.
- Use authentic experiences, like a friend’s hospitalization, to introduce the topic gently.
- Keep documents organized. Store a copy digitally and give another to your proxy.
- Encourage your loved ones to share their own wishes too. Planning works best when it’s mutual.
Frequently asked questions
Kinnect offers two tools that matter here. What Matters Most is a free end-of-life reflection tool built with a physician, designed to help families think through values and wishes before they are needed. The Echo daily prompt feature gives families a simple, low-friction way to stay emotionally close through difficult periods. Start free at kinnect.club — no credit card required.
