SB 1088 clarifies end-of-life care directives, so Californians get the medical care they want when they can no longer express their wishes

May 19, 2026 - SACRAMENTO – The Senate on Monday passed legislation by Sen. Catherine S. Blakespear to ensure Catherine S. Blakespear California senatorCalifornians get the end-of-life care they desire.

Specifically, SB 1088 would improve clarity and consistency among the three types of forms that can be used to legally document the type of care and medical treatment a person wants should they become seriously ill or injured and unable to articulate their wishes. 

“People should get the end-of-life care they want, even if they are incapacitated or can no longer express their wishes,” Sen. Blakespear said. “This bill puts patients first by strengthening continuity on advance care planning forms, so their medical wishes are honored when they matter most.”

Californians have three types of advance care planning forms they can use: An advance care directive, a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) form and a Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment (POLST). Each are different with different requirements.

The legislation makes a number of commonsense changes to ensure consistency and effectiveness for these forms. For instance, it specifies that DNRs and POLSTs could both be signed by a nurse practitioner, physician assistant or a doctor, instead of just a physician, as is currently the case for a DNR. 

In addition, POLST forms could be signed electronically, future DNRs and POLSTs would have to be dated and DNRs and POLSTs executed outside of the state would apply in California. 

Summary of advance care planning forms:

  • An advance care directive allows a person to designate someone to make medical decisions on their behalf and to explain what medical treatments should and should not be done if they lose decision-making capacity, among other things.
  • A prehospital DNR form applies when a person stops breathing or their heart stops beating and allows a person to decline resuscitative care orders.
  • POLST includes a DNR section but has additional sections as well, allowing a person to give medical providers instructions on interventions, such as ventilation, ICU, transport, comfort measures and artificial nutrition by feeding tube.

SB 1088 follows last year’s passage of SB 403, legislation by Sen. Blakespear to continue California’s medical-aid-in-dying law and prevent it from expiring in 2031. The bill eliminated the sunset date for California’s End of Life Option Act, which gives mentally capable, terminally ill adults with a prognosis of six months or less to live the option to request from their doctor a prescription for medication they can decide to self-administer to die peacefully in their sleep.

SB 1088 is sponsored by the Coalition for Compassionate Care of California (CCCC). 

The legislation, which passed on a bipartisan 38-0 vote, goes next to the Assembly for consideration.


Sen. Blakespear represents Senate District 38, which covers northern San Diego County and southern Orange County. To learn more about the district and Sen. Blakespear, visit her Senate website.

Source: Sennator Catherine S. Blakespear