End-of-Life Planning | Advanced Care Software

End-of-Life Planning | Advanced Care Software

51 Articles

Record Your Wishes for Life’s Final Stage

End-of-Life Planning helps you document how you wish to be cared for during the later stages of life. This includes comfort measures, medical treatment preferences, cultural or spiritual considerations and values that matter most to you.

Recording these wishes in advance provides clarity for loved ones and helps ensure decisions are made in line with your preferences rather than assumptions or guesswork.

Advance Care Directive with QR Emergency Access

Your end-of-life wishes are formally captured through your Advance Care Directive, which can be stored in your Evaheld Vault and linked to a QR Emergency Access Card.

You may upload a statutory directive for your jurisdiction or complete the Evaheld Advance Care Directive, ensuring your instructions are available to clinicians and can be updated as circumstances change.

Secure Your Health and Care Wishes in your Vault

🩺 Secure your End-of-Life wishes in your Evaheld Vault
Record medical wishes, care preferences and decision-making details with our trusted advanced care software, so your voice continues to guide your care when it matters most.

Funeral directors and celebrants play different roles. This guide compares responsibilities, costs, and benefits so families can choose the right support for meaningful ceremonies.

This guide explains how to support a loved one at home during end-of-life care. It covers comfort measures, symptom support, documenting care wishes, and keeping essential health and personal information organised to reduce uncertainty and stress.

This gentle guide helps individuals and families plan ahead with confidence. It supports documenting care preferences, organising essential information, and preserving personal values so decisions feel clear, calm, and respectful.

This guide helps you clearly record your health preferences, values, and important personal information, ensuring your wishes are understood and respected if you cannot speak for yourself.

Live well on your own terms with a progressive condition. Our Australian guide helps you plan for future care, financial security, and personal wishes with clarity and control.

A practical guide to managing daily dementia care with confidence. Covers routines, personal care, nutrition, behaviour changes, and how to keep health information, care preferences, and important details organised so support can be given consistently and with less stress.

This guide explains the best way to help a loved one plan for end of life with clarity and care. It walks through how to start conversations, organise essential documents, record care wishes, and ensure information is accessible when needed. Designed to reduce stress and confusion, it helps families support loved ones with confidence and compassion during an emotional time.

A clear checklist to help record final wishes, organise legal and personal details, and ensure loved ones can quickly access important information during stressful or emotional times.

Being named an executor or stepping into a carer role often happens during one of life’s most stressful moments — when clarity is hardest to find and mistakes can be costly. This executor and carer roadmap provides a clear, practical guide to navigating every stage of responsibility, from the first urgent decisions through to long-term administration, care coordination, and final closure. You’ll learn what executors and carers must do first, which legal, financial, and care tasks can’t wait, and how responsibilities change over time. The roadmap breaks down complex obligations into manageable steps, helping you avoid common pitfalls such as missed deadlines, family conflict, lost documents, and unintentional legal exposure. Whether you are managing an estate, supporting a loved one with health and care decisions, or doing both at once, this guide explains how the roles intersect — and where they differ. It also highlights when to seek professional support, how to communicate clearly with family members, and how to stay organised under pressure. Designed for executors, carers, guardians, and families planning ahead, this roadmap brings structure, confidence, and calm to a role that often feels overwhelming — ensuring nothing important is missed from start to finish.

Legacy planning isn’t something you do at the end of life — it’s something that supports better living at every stage. By capturing your stories, organising important documents, and planning ahead, you create clarity, reduce stress for loved ones, and make everyday decisions easier. Legacy planning helps you live with intention, not uncertainty.

Navigating advance care planning in Australia involves understanding specific legal frameworks and medical systems. This authoritative 2026 guide provides a complete overview tailored for Australians. We explain the difference between an Advance Care Directive, an Enduring Power of Attorney, and other key documents, detailing their legal standing in each state and territory. The guide walks you through how to discuss your values with your GP, formalise your preferences, and ensure your document is accessible to healthcare providers and family. It demystifies the process, empowering you to make informed decisions about your future care and guaranteeing your voice is heard, even if you cannot speak for yourself.

Navigating advance care planning in Australia involves understanding specific legal frameworks and medical systems. This authoritative 2026 guide provides a complete overview tailored for Australians. We explain the difference between an Advance Care Directive, an Enduring Power of Attorney, and other key documents, detailing their legal standing in each state and territory. The guide walks you through how to discuss your values with your GP, formalise your preferences, and ensure your document is accessible to healthcare providers and family. It demystifies the process, empowering you to make informed decisions about your future care and guaranteeing your voice is heard, even if you cannot speak for yourself.