Delaware Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act (DUHCDA):
What You Need to Know
Delaware has adopted the Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act of 2023 (UHCDA 2023), replacing its nearly 30-year-old health-care directive law. This new framework, known locally as the Delaware Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act (DUHCDA), went into effect on September 30, 2025. It updates how residents can make advance health-care directives, appoint decision-makers, and ensure their wishes are honored if they cannot speak for themselves. Importantly, directives issued under the old law will remain valid.
The DUHCDA modernizes Delaware’s approach to end-of-life and medical decision-making. It clarifies the powers of agents, streamlines the process of creating directives, adds provisions for mental health directives, and updates the criteria for who can act as a surrogate decision-maker if no one has been appointed. Healthcare institutions will also have greater authority to petition for guardianship when patients are unable to make decisions and lack a representative. The law strikes a balance between individual autonomy, family involvement, and practical needs in today’s healthcare system.
Why Delaware Needed a New Law
Delaware’s prior system was based on the 1993 Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act, enacted in 1996. While it served as the legal foundation for decades, medicine, technology, and family structures have undergone significant changes since then. Think about electronic records, non-traditional family arrangements, long-term care challenges, and mental health awareness — all of which require legal updates.
By adopting the UHCDA 2023, Delaware joins other states in creating a consistent, modern standard for advanced health-care planning. The goal is to make it easier for people to express their wishes, empower trusted decision-makers, and reduce uncertainty for families and medical professionals.
Key Features of the DUHCDA
Advance Health-Care Directives
An advance directive is a legal document where you can:
State your wishes about medical treatment (for example, life support or resuscitation).
Appoint an agent (also called a health-care power of attorney) to make decisions if you lose capacity.
Under the new law, Delaware residents still have this ability — but with more flexibility and fewer hurdles, especially regarding how documents are created and recognized.
Clearer Definitions
The DUHCDA keeps familiar terms but sharpens them:
Capacity means being able to understand and communicate health-care choices.
Healthcare decision-making encompasses everything from choosing providers to accepting or refusing treatment.
A life-sustaining procedure refers to artificial measures that prolong life without offering realistic recovery prospects.
A surrogate is someone who can step in if no agent or guardian is available.
These definitions reduce legal gray areas that sometimes cause disputes in hospitals.
Mental Health Directives
One of the most significant updates is the ability to create advanced mental health directives. These let individuals specify treatment preferences for mental health conditions, including a “Ulysses clause” — a binding instruction that can apply even if someone later objects during a mental health crisis. This gives patients more control and provides clarity for providers in challenging situations.
Updated Surrogate Decision-Maker Rules
If you don’t have a written directive or an appointed agent, someone still needs to speak for you. The DUHCDA revises Delaware’s surrogate hierarchy (the list of who gets priority). This helps reflect modern families and living situations, ensuring decision-making isn’t limited strictly to spouses or blood relatives.
Limits and Powers of Agents
The law strengthens safeguards by requiring express grants for certain agent powers, such as:
Admitting someone to a long-term care facility.
Accessing confidential medical records.
Making mental health treatment decisions.
This ensures people know exactly what authority they are giving to their chosen agent.
Institutional Guardianship
Hospitals and long-term care facilities will have more apparent authority to petition courts for guardianship when a patient needs decisions made but lacks an agent or surrogate. This addresses a real-world problem: patients “stuck” in acute care with no decision-maker, even after their immediate needs have been met.
What Stays the Same
Not everything changes. Many protections remain from the old Delaware law:
Your old directive is still valid. If you already have one, you don’t need to redo it unless you want to add new powers or mental health instructions.
Providers must act in good faith. Doctors and nurses who follow valid directives or agent instructions are shielded from liability.
Conscience protections remain. Providers can still decline to follow instructions that conflict with their values or involve medically ineffective treatments.
This continuity avoids confusion during the transition.
Why This Matters to You
If you live in Delaware, the DUHCDA gives you more tools to plan ahead:
Peace of mind: Your medical and mental health wishes can be recorded and respected.
Clarity for loved ones: Family won’t be left guessing about your preferences in critical moments.
Flexibility: The law accommodates electronic directives, modern relationships, and expanded decision-making powers.
Protection: Clearer rules reduce the risk of disputes among relatives or between families and providers.
Even if you already have an advance directive, this is a good time to review it and consider updating language to match the new law.
Timeline for Implementation
Until September 29, 2025, the old Delaware law (from 1996) still governed advance directives and healthcare decisions.
September 30, 2025: The DUHCDA officially took effect. All new directives will follow their rules, though old ones remain valid.
This transition period provides individuals, attorneys, and healthcare institutions with time to prepare.
Practical Next Steps for Delaware Residents
Check your existing directive. If you have one, review it with a lawyer or health-care professional to ensure it still reflects your wishes.
Consider adding mental health provisions. If mental health care is a concern, this is a major opportunity to add clear instructions.
Talk with your agent or family. Ensure that the people who may be making decisions on your behalf understand your values and preferences.
Stay tuned for updated forms. Hospitals, law firms, and the state are likely to publish new template documents closer to the 2025 effective date.
The Bigger Picture
The Delaware Uniform Health-Care Decisions Act is part of a broader trend: states modernizing laws to respect autonomy while adapting to today’s medical realities. By making directives easier to create and expanding them to cover mental health, Delaware is helping its residents face difficult health situations with dignity and control.
References:
Delaware General Assembly – Senate Bill 309 (the enabling legislation)
This is the bill text and legislative summary adopting UHCDA 2023 in Delaware, showing precisely what is being changed and how Delaware is implementing the uniform law.
Link: Bill Detail — SB 309 Delaware General AssemblyDelaware Code Online — Title 16, Chapter 25 (Health-Care Decisions)
This is the statutory basis for Delaware’s existing health-care decisions law (which gets superseded/amended by DUHCDA). It helps compare the old law and see which provisions are being replaced.
Link: Chapter 25 – Health-Care Decisions Delaware Code OnlineJustia Law — 16 Del. C. § 2507 (Surrogate decision-makers)
This gives the current (pre-2025) default rules about who may act as a surrogate when someone hasn’t appointed an agent or lacks capacity. Because DUHCDA will revise the surrogate hierarchy, this is useful as a “before” reference.
Link: 16 Del. C. § 2507 – Surrogates Justia Law