Title: Informed Consent for Transfusion
1Informed Consent for Transfusion
- Blood Centers of California
- Board Meeting
- 9/29/14
2History of Informed Consent
- Doctrine of informed consent has roots in the
ideal of individual freedom - A patient is free to say NO or YES without
stating reasons - The old standard of the medical practitoner using
his/her best judgement to determine the care of
patient has evolved into duty to inform patient
of significant facts so that patient can decide - In 1914 Judge Cardozo states every human being
of adult years and sound mind has a right to
determine what shall be done to his own body
3History of Informed Consent
- In 1972, the CA Supreme Court, Cobbs v Grant
- Provided a seminal opinion defining modern
informed consent as an integral part of the
physicians overall obligation to the patient
there is a duty of reasonable disclosure of the
available choices with respect to the proposed
therapy and of the dangers inherently and
potentially involved in each.
4What makes an informed consent
- Consent is a Process
- The process that medical practitioners achieve
informed consent is NOT just completion of a well
crafted form. Informed consent is a process with
a set of discussions, questions, response, and
considerations - Patient must have opportunity to ask questions
- Consent Requires Comprehension by the Patient
- Adults judged to be incompetent do not have the
legal capacity to give consent. Consent may be
procured by spouse or legally authorized rep - Minors up to age of 17 are required to have a
guardian who can engage in consent process
(exceptions emancipated minors) - Consent May Be Revoked at Any Time
- Prospective
- Consent is Limited in Time and Scope
- Duration of consent should be specified to the
patient
5What makes and Informed Consent
- Contains Necessary Information
- The Reasonable Patient Standard (CA, NJ, NY,
WA) Requires that doctors explain all medically
reasonable courses of treatment and non-treatment
options in a manner that a reasonable patient in
the same or similar circumstances would require
to make and informed choice. - The Simple Subjective Standard (TX, HI, LO)
Requires doctor to disclose enough information
for the patient to make an informed decision. - NOTE No duty to disclose every detail. The duty
is to disclose information and risks that a
reasonably prudent patient would consider
significant. - Cobbs v Grant (CA) the patients interest in
information does not extend to lengthy discourse
of all possible complications.the patient is
concerned with risks and deaththere is no
providers duty to discuss the relatively minor
risks inherent in common procedures.
6What Makes an Informed Consent
- Contains Necessary Information, continued
- Explanation/Description of the Intervention
- Simple for the transfusion process
- Anticipated benefits
- Risks/Side Effects
- Alternatives
- Opportunity for questions/clarifications
- Availability of choices
7Informed Consent for Blood Transfusion
- In 1991, AABB issued a memorandum with
recommendations for transfusion informed consent.
Recommendations were placed in standards in
2000. - Standards for Blood Banks and Transfusion
Services, 29th edition - 5.28.1 Recipient Consent
- The blood bank or transfusion service medical
director shall participate in the development of
policies, processes, and procedures regarding
recipient consent for transfusion - 5.28.1.1 At a minimum, elements of consent
shall include all of the following - A description of the risks, benefits, and
treatment alternatives (including non-treatment) - The opportunity to ask questions
- The right to accept or refuse transfusion
- 2006 AABB issued a guidance document
- Burch J, Uhl J for the Scientific Section
Coordinating Committee. Guidelines for informed
consent in transfusion medicine. Bethesda, MD
AABB, 2006 - TJC and CAP also have requirements for informed
consent for transfusion
8Informed Consent for Blood Transfusion
- In 1991 it was still uncommon to obtain informed
consent for transfusion in American Hospitals - This changed in the next few years
- A survey in 2003 Separate consent documentation
for transfusion was implemented up to 96 of
hospitals - In CA, there is a requirement to provide patient
with standardized informational brochure A
Patients Guide to Blood Transfusion under the
Paul Gann Act
9Examples of Risks Associated with Transfusion
Categories of Complication
High Frequency Fever Urticaria
Low Frequency Infection Mistransfusion
Patient-specific Volume Overload Acute Lung Injury Hypersensitivity
Theoretical/Controversial Immunomodulation CHIKV transmission
10Hospital Consent Variability
Practice 1 Three critical AABB elements are
found within the consent itself and then also
refer to the Patients Guide to Blood Transfusion
11Hospital Consent Variability
Practice 2 The consent includes the entire
contents of the Patients Guide to Blood
Transfusions. No additional information other
than what is in the Guide is provided. NOTE
The Patients Guide to Blood Transfusions lacks
information about non-infectious risks of
transfusion which are much more common than the
infectious disease risks that are included in the
brochure
12Hospital Consent Variability
Practice 3 The consent refers to the providing
the Patients Guide to Blood Transfusions to
give the patient information regarding risks
alternatives. MORE COMMON PRACTICE The
Patients Guide to Blood Transfusions states that
it cannot be considered a replacement for the
Informed Consent process prior to blood
transfusion. It can be used as a source of
information. NOTE The Patients Guide to Blood
Transfusions lacks information about
non-infectious risks of transfusion which are
much more common than the infectious disease
risks that are included in the brochure
13Considerations
- Current Patients Guide to Blood Transfusion
needs to be updated if it is being used as
primary source of information in hospital
consents - In current state, it only includes infectious
risks. Needs to also include non-infectious risk
which can also cause significant morbidity and
mortality. - Needs a description of the treatment
- Benefits of the treatment
- Can a standardized universal consent be created
which includes all information in the Patients
Guide (plus updates)? If this consent is used, a
separate informational brochure would not be
required.
14Proposed Revisions to Patient Guide to Blood
Transfusions