Tell him you wish to take the document home to go over it further and call an attorney for adivice,you can get free on line advice for something minor.If he refuses to let you take it home then flat out refuse to sign it and explain why.Good luck and get well.Kick the hell out of that cancer :0)
2007-01-12 02:22:35
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answer #1
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answered by rosierotnass 2
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Well, just being under a chemotherapy regime is not a problem, it is solely whether the individual is mentally capable of making complex legal decisions. I don't think the chemo has anything to do with it unless the treatments are causing psychological distress.
2007-01-12 02:26:28
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answer #2
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answered by David M 7
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If the treatments leave you incapable of making decisions then you need to get assign a power of attorney to someone to do it for you......otherwise, poor memory is not neccessarily evidence of an inability to make decisions...
2007-01-12 02:31:50
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answer #3
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answered by boston857 5
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yes they should sign too agree to chemo, but as far as any other signing, why should they, they go through enough, and i also think children should be able to consent of there treatment, they understand more than u think, and i think its childrent 8 and above, under that age, u can tell them about chemo, and whats gonna happen, but it wont click til it happens, as far as being sick, tossing there cookies, and they will lose there hair, and they will feel alot off heavy burning, where ever it is they might have cancer
2007-01-12 02:28:01
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answer #4
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answered by susan s 1
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substantial different could in trouble-free words signal criminal record if the substantial different has capacity of criminal professional. A substantial different could likely under no circumstances signal a testimony, on an same time as capacity of criminal professional because a testimony is taken under consideration a own understanding truth of the affiant.
2016-10-30 22:05:41
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answer #5
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answered by ? 4
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