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Informed Consent

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Title: Documentation, Liability and Legibility Author: Sandra A. Price Last modified by: saprice Created Date: 5/22/2002 11:38:23 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Informed Consent


1
Informed Consent
  • Sandra A. Price, JD
  • Risk Manager
  • WVU Health Sciences Center
  • 293-3584

2
Informed Consent
  • Is it good for the patient or good for the
    provider or both?

3
Why?
  • It promotes patient autonomy and encourages self
    determination
  • It promotes shared decision making
  • It is a communication tool
  • It is a tool to encourage patient compliance
  • It is a legal document

4
General Rule
  • The adult patient with decision making capacity
    has the right to decide how and when to be
    treated after receiving information about the
    proposed procedure or treatment.

5
Threshold Question
  • Does the patient have decision making capacity?
  • If yes, how is informed consent obtained?
  • If not, who can/should make decisions for the
    patient?

6
Lane v. Candura Case Discussion
  • Mrs. Candura was a 77 year old widow suffering
    from gangrene in her right foot and lower leg.
    Her physician recommended amputation without
    delay. After some vacillation, Mrs. Candura
    refused to consent to the operation.
  • Mrs. Candura was confused and depressed since the
    death of her husband. Her relationship with her
    children was marked with conflict. She lived on
    her own until her recent hospitalizations.

7
Case Continued
  • She earlier had an infection in her right foot
    and her toe was amputated.
  • She again developed gangrene in her foot and part
    of her foot was amputated. She then developed
    gangrene in the remainder of her right foot.
  • After persuasion from her physician, she
    consented to the operation twice, but changed her
    mind and withdrew her consent both times.

8
Case Continued
  • She was discouraged by the failure of the earlier
    operations to stop the gangrene.
  • She wanted to get well but understood that her
    refusal to consent to surgery could lead to her
    death.
  • She was lucid on some matters and confused on
    others and her train of thought wandered.
  • Her reasons for refusing to consent were
  • She did not want to be a burden.
  • She did not want to be an invalid or live in a
    nursing home.
  • She did not believe the operation will cure her.
  • She did not fear death, but welcomed it.

9
Case Continued
  • Her daughter petitioned the court and was
    appointed guardian. Mrs. Canduras lawyer
    appealed.
  • Did Mrs. Candura have decision making capacity?
  • Did she give informed refusal to the surgery?

10
What can you do when you believe a patient makes
a bad decision?
  • Do what you think will most benefit the patient
    or
  • Appoint a surrogate decision maker or
  • Coerce the patient into accepting your
    recommendation or
  • Persuade the patient to accept your
    recommendation through education.

11
Elements of Informed Consent
  • Diagnosis
  • Nature and purpose of treatment
  • Person performing procedure
  • Benefits and risks
  • Realistic probability of success
  • Alternatives
  • Their benefits and risks
  • Prognosis if no treatment
  • Answering patients questions
  • Assessing patient understanding

12
Patient Need Standard
  • WV adopted the patient need standard - What does
    the average, reasonable person need to know to
    make an intelligent choice?
  • Cross v. Trapp, 294 SE2d 445 (WV 1982)

13
Risk Disclosure
  • Most common
  • Worst case scenario
  • Chance of permanent disfigurement, loss of sexual
    function or death
  • Watch for complications
  • When to come back or when to call you

14
Other aspects of Informed Consent
  • Who gets consent?
  • Shared decisions making
  • Written v. oral v. implied consent
  • Informed Refusal
  • Exceptions to general rule
  • Mature minors
  • Emergency circumstances
  • Therapeutic privilege
  • What if patient asks you to decide?

15
Health Care Decisions Act
  • Methods to determine appropriate decisions and
    decision makers for patients that lack decision
    making capacity.

16
Advanced Directives in WV
  • Living Will
  • Medical Power of Attorney
  • DNR Card
  • POST Physician Orders for Scope of Treatment

17
If there are no advanced directives that tell you
how the patient wants to be treated under these
circumstances, you must look to a substitute
decision maker for informed consent.
18
Substitute Decision Makers
  • Court Appointed Guardians
  • Medical Power of Attorney Representatives
  • Surrogate Decision Makers

19
Standards for Substitute Decision Makers
  • If they know, what does the patient want in this
    circumstance.
  • Knowing the patient, their religious preferences
    and moral beliefs, can it be determined what the
    patient would want in this circumstance?
  • What is in the patients best interest?
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