A directive may not:
(1) Create an entitlement to mental health or medical
treatment or supersede a determination of medical necessity;
(2) Obligate any health care provider, professional person,
or health care facility to pay the costs associated with the
treatment requested;
(3) Obligate any health care provider, professional person,
or health care facility to be responsible for the nontreatment
personal care of the principal or the principal's personal
affairs outside the scope of services the facility normally
provides;
(4) Replace or supersede the provisions of any will or
testamentary document or supersede the provisions of intestate
succession;
(5) Be revoked by an incapacitated principal unless that
principal selected the option to permit revocation while
incapacitated at the time his or her directive was executed; or
(6) Be used as the authority for inpatient admission for
more than fourteen days in any twenty-one day period.
[2003 c 283 § 7.]