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Supported Decision-Making Service for Persons with Disabilities | Service Model
The Human Rights Center for People with Disabilitis
illnesses – are in a dynamic, changing and relative condition. Gradual loss of abilities occurs over
time – sometimes a very long time (decades); it occurs in different contexts, to different extents
and with respect to different functionality areas; it is neither linear nor "binary" in the sense that
until very advanced stages, senior citizens still maintain functional and decision-making abilities
in specific and different areas.
To conclude this section, in the context of guardianship, senior citizens undergo an experience
partially similar (but consisting of unique characteristics) to the experience of the population
of persons with disabilities, resulting in excessive revocation of their personal liberty and
disproportionate violation of their rights. Therefore, the vision of developing a supported decision-
making service model as an alternative to guardianship, whose implementation would prevent
unnecessary violation or revocation and/or disproportionate restriction of the legal capacity of
senior citizens – is a vision which is definitely shared by persons with disabilities and senior
citizens.
However, considering the unique nature of the population of senior citizens – namely, the fact that
throughout the years they had built an independent and autonomous "life course" (usually without
disabilities), and that throughout their life they "made" personal and family choices – the supported
decision-making service model should be "one of the alternatives" rather than an exclusive and/
or preferred "alternative", over the current institution of guardianship. Many senior citizens
may (and this assumption should be empirically substantiated in the future) prefer or choose the
alternative of "advance directives" or the alternative of "enduring power of attorney" – over a
"supported decision-making service", for different personal reasons and motives. Moreover, due
to the progressive nature of diseases such as dementia, a supported decision-making service could
become limited in its ability to provide a solution to the real needs at a certain point of time, and
other alternatives which were mentioned above, will prove to be more effective in securing senior
citizens' wills and preferences. In this context, it should be remembered that the last amendment
to the law has significantly expanded the scope of enduring powers of attorney and the areas to
which they may be applied (such funds and property management) which did not exist in the past.
Target population
As noted above, in practice most older adults placed under guardianship in the State of Israel are
senior citizens. The characteristics of this population, at least those placed under guardianship,
are different from those of the population of persons with disabilities. At least according to
currently available data (which are limited in scope), this population is characterized as having a
larger female majority ; advanced in age; single (in the sense of absence of spouse); and living in
institutional settings for the elderly (senior citizens' homes and nursing homes). According to this
data, a significant part of the above population experiences different types of dementia, but mostly
Alzheimer's dementia, entailing (in the more advanced stages of the disease) profound cognitive
impairment.
Similar to the pilot project conducted with persons with disabilities, it is advisable an identical
pilot project be conducted with the population of senior citizens – in general, and with senior
citizens suffering from dementia (of different types) – in particular.
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