West Virginia Code § 16-30-2

Legislative findings and purpose
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(a) Purpose. -- The purpose of this article is to ensure that a patient's right to self-
determination in health care decisions be communicated and protected; and to set forth a
process for private health care decision making for incapacitated adults, including the use of
advance directives, which reduces the need for judicial involvement and defines the
circumstances under which immunity shall be available for health care proveiders and
surrogate decision makers who make health care decisions.
The intent of the Legislature is to establish an effective method for private health care
decision making for incapacitated adults, and to provide that theu courts should not be the
usual venue for making decisions. It is not the intent of the Legislature to legalize, condone,
authorize or approve mercy killing or assisted suicide. t
(b) Findings. -- The Legislature hereby finds that:
(1) Common law tradition and the medical professilon in general have traditionally
recognized the right of a capable adult to accespt or reject medical or surgical intervention
affecting one's own medical condition;
(2) The application of recent advances in medical science and technology increasingly
involves patients who are unconscious or otherwise unable to accept or reject medical or
surgical treatment affecting their medical conditions;
(3) Such advances have also made it possible to prolong the dying process artificially
through the use of intervening treatments or procedures which, in some cases, offer no hope
of medical benefit;
(4) Capable adVults should be encouraged to issue advance directives designating their health
care representatives so that in the event any such adult becomes unconscious or otherwise
incapable of making health care decisions, decisions may be made by others who are aware
of such person's own wishes and values; and
(5) The right to make medical treatment decisions extends to a person who is incapacitated
at the moment of decision. An incapacitated person who has not made his or her wishes
known in advance through an applicable living will, medical power of attorney or through
some other means has the right to have health care decisions made on his or her behalf by a
person who will act in accordance with the incapacitated person's expressed values and
wishes, or, if those values and wishes are unknown, in the incapacitated person's best
interests.

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