Fischer’s drive to effect legislative change began in the fall of 2023 for an assignment in a health policy and finance class, part of her Doctor of Nursing Practice coursework, when she was encouraged to write letters to state representatives about health policy issues.
Just hours after sending a letter to State Rep. Kelly Skidmore, D-Boca Raton, about advance directive orders, Fischer received a response and a request to meet.
“I was shocked,” Fischer said. “I had no idea that a simple letter would get this kind of response.”
A legislative proposal was already in the works when Fischer wrote her letter. And she quickly joined the effort backed by Dr. Leonard Hock Jr., a geriatric physician and longtime advocate of hospice and palliative care issues; and Hattie Bryant, an author, lecturer and advocate of advance care planning.
The proposal aimed to create a formalized, legally recognized document — one that would translate a patient’s end-of-life wishes into actionable medical orders. The bill also proposed an electronic registry to ensure that emergency medical service workers could access these orders, even before arriving at a scene.
The proposal, however, failed to advance during the 2024 legislative session. It lacked widespread support from the health care community, including the powerful Florida Nurses Association, which withheld its endorsement — partly because of its formal approval process before supporting legislation and the exclusion of independently operating nurse practitioners from executing advance directives.
Fischer undertook the formal process of securing the Florida Nurses Association’s endorsement and ensured that the proposal’s backers understood the necessity of inclusive language to gain full support.
The 2025 proposal advanced with revised language, aligning with updated Florida laws, allowing nurse practitioners with full practice authority and physician assistants to be included among those authorized to execute the orders. She played a direct role in bringing the discussion to the attention of the Florida Nurses Association and the Florida Nurse Practitioner Network, ultimately securing their endorsements.
“Timing is everything,” Fischer said. “I happened to be there at just the right moment.”
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