Abstract
The “Three Instruments of Peace” (平安三寶) are the cornerstone documents for thoughtful life and end-of-life planning in Hong Kong: the Will, which directs how one’s estate is handled after death; the Enduring Power of Attorney (EPA), which appoints a trusted person to manage financial affairs after loss of mental capacity; and the Advance Medical Directive (AMD), which records one’s choices about refusing life-sustaining treatments in specific clinical situations. Their shared purpose is to safeguard autonomy, reduce family conflict, and give professionals clear, lawful guidance when decisions must be made quickly.
Yet these documents only work if they can be found and verified at the critical moment. In Hong Kong practice, the original paper often carries the legal force, and when originals are misplaced, hidden in private drawers, or simply unknown to family members or clinicians, the maker’s wishes may be delayed or even go unhonoured.
This report presents a qualitative feasibility study on setting up a central depository for the Three Instruments of Peace in Hong Kong. Between December 2024 and April 2025, we conducted 55 in-depth interviews across patient groups, family carers, legal and medical professionals, social workers, legislators, civil servants, bankers, and IT experts. We mapped where the current system fails: public awareness, procedural opacity, and especially the discoverability and legal finality of documents and assessed design options from a minimal metadata registry to digital copies, together with governance models that balance public accountability and operational agility.
Our proposal is a phased, voluntary system that improves document discovery for Wills and offers carefully scoped backup for EPAs and AMDs, with user support and professional navigation built in, and with a pathway to statutory recognition once evidence and trust are established.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Place of Publication | Hong Kong |
| Publisher | Asia-Pacific Institute of Ageing Studies, Lingnan University |
| Number of pages | 62 |
| Publication status | Published - Aug 2025 |
Bibliographical note
AcknowledgmentsThe research study could not have been completed without the generous donation of the Zeshan Foundation and excellent expert advice from the MIP Care Resources Connect (MIPCRC). The research team is thankful for their trust and support.
We want to thank you for the Research Advisory Committee of this study, chaired by Prof Chi-Kwong Law, and the committee members, who offered many constructive suggestions while completing this study. We are grateful to the respondents who participated in the in-depth interviews and shared their expertise and experiences. Professionals who spoke frankly about practical obstacles and safeguards helped ground our feasibility analysis. Community advocates kept accessibility and public trust firmly in view. The patients and family carers who recounted the difficulties of safeguarding their wishes at moments of crisis; their insight directed our attention to the everyday realities any deposit system must serve.
We thank Lingnan University’s students for participating in fieldwork and preparing interview transcripts.
Lastly, we gratefully acknowledge the following organisations for helping recruit respondents to this study:
• Caritas Jockey Club Resource and Support Centre for Carers 明愛賽馬會照顧者資源及支援中心
• DoctorNow NEEDS 老友所醫
• Grassroots Development Centre 基層發展中心
• MIP Care Resources Connect 精神健康資訊匯
• Haven of Hope Christian Service 基督教靈實協會
• Hong Kong Alzheimer’s Disease Association 香港認知障礙症協會
• Hong Kong Internet and Ecommerce Association 香港互聯網及電子商務發展協會
• Hong Kong Joint Council of Parents of the Mentally Handicapped 香港弱智人士家長聯會
• Pneumoconiosis Mutual Aid Association 肺積塵互助會
• Stewards 香港神託會
• Tung Wah Group of Hospitals (Jockey Club Carer Space; Mr. Lo Hung Cheuk & Mrs. Lo Wong Yuk Man Neighbourhood Elderly Centre; Chun Tei Kok Buddhist Association Limited Centre of Life Enlightening) 東華三院 (賽馬會照顧者中心(大角咀),羅雄焯羅王玉文伉儷長者鄰舍中心,準提閣佛學會生命同行坊)
Funding
This study was funded by the Zeshan Foundation and commissioned by MIP Care Resources Connect (MIPCRC). 研究計劃由擇善基金會資助,並由精神健康資訊匯(MIPCRC)委託嶺南大學亞太老年學研究中心(APIAS)進行。
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Dive into the research topics of 'Research Report on the Feasibility of Setting Up a Central Depository for Storing ‘Three Instruments of Peace’ in Hong Kong'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Press/Media
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應對人口老化 機構倡設「平安三寶」儲存庫 Asia-Pacific Institute of Ageing Studies' research on public awareness of "Three Instruments of Peace"
9/09/25
1 item of Media coverage
Press/Media: Research / Knowledge Transfer
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精神健康資訊匯:《香港設立「平安三寶」中央儲存庫可行性研究報告 》
4/09/25
1 item of Media coverage
Press/Media: Research / Knowledge Transfer
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精神健康資訊匯:《香港設立「平安三寶」中央儲存庫可行性研究報告 》
4/09/25
1 item of Media coverage
Press/Media: Research / Knowledge Transfer
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