Even in relation to this scenario, the Court of Genoa,42 holding an opposite view, expressed its opinion with regard to the request made by a hospitalised woman suffering from severe heart failure, given a real, concrete risk that she could shortly be in a state of unconsciousness, to appoint a support administrator with the task of reaffirming her wishes with regard to health treatment that were already expressed by the woman in a written document. The Court has stated that, if it is deemed that the task of the support administrator is to bear witness to the wishes of his ward for as long as this ward remains in a conscious state, the protection measure would not in fact produce any added value regarding the firm wish expressed until that moment directly by the patient, adequately documented and verified daily by doctors, and which in any case must be held in due consideration by healthcare staff. If it is deemed, on the other hand, that the purpose of support administration is to give a voice to the ward in the face of a clinical condition that has changed compared with the condition that existed before, not only would there be the risk of representing a wish of the beneficiary that no longer exists, but above all the risk of placing in fact a very personal right in the hands of a third party