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INFORMED CONSENT

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Principle of Respect for Autonomy: ... Full Disclosure. Disclose every benefit and risk, no matter how ... If taken literally, full disclosure is impossible. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INFORMED CONSENT


1
INFORMED CONSENT
  • How Do I Gain A Patients Valid Consent to
    Benefit Their Oral Health?

2
  • Curiosity is the most insatiable of lusts.
  • Michel Foucault
  • French Philosopher
  • 1926-1984

3
Two Moral Principles Provide the Ethical
Foundation for Informed Consent
  • Principle of Beneficience
  • Do Good for the Patient by Promoting Their
    Well-Being.
  • Principle of Respect for Autonomy
  • Each Person Should be Self-Determining, the
    Author of His/Her Own Life.

4
Instrumental Value of Self-Determination
  • In most cases, the individuals well-being is
    best served by his/her own subjective judgement.

5
Intrinsic Value of Self-Determination
  • ...Unless the patient has requested this course
    of conduct, the individual will not have been
    shown proper respect as a person nor provided
    with adequate protection against arbitrary,
    albeit well-meaning domination by others.
  • Even if it could be shown that another could
    do a better job of determining what is in the
    individuals interest, there is still a reason
    for recognizing self-determination as an
    individuals right

6
Quote from John Stuart Mill
  • The human faculties of perception, judgement,
    discriminative feeling, mental activity, and even
    moral preference, are exercised only in making a
    choice. He who does anything because it is the
    custom makes no choice. He gains no practice
    either in discerning or desiring what is best.
    The mental and moral, like the muscular powers,
    are improved by being used...

7
  • He who lets the world, or his own portion of
    it, choose his plan of life for him, has no need
    of any other faculty than the ape-like one of
    imitation. He who chooses his plan for himself
    employs all his faculties. He must use
    observation to see, activity to gather materials
    for decision, discrimination to decide, and when
    he has decided, firmness and self-control to hold
    his deliberative decision...

8
  • Where, not the persons own character, but the
    traditions and customs of other people are the
    rules of conduct, there is wanting one of the
    principle ingredients of human happiness.
  • John Stuart Mill
  • English Philosopher
  • Formulator of Utilitarianism

9
BeneficenceAutonomy
  • The definition of health is imprecise and
    indefinite. It depends to some extent upon the
    goals and values of the individual.
  • Even when the definition is agreed upon there is
    often no definitive criterion to determine how to
    achieve it.
  • In recommending therapy, health professionals
    tend to reflect their own values and preferences,
    which may differ from their patients.
  • Determining what constitutes health and how it is
    best promoted requires knowledge of the patients
    goals, values, and preferences.

10
  • For the reasons just given, determining whether a
    treatment plan will, if successful, promote a
    patients well-being is a matter of individual
    judgement.
  • In each case the goals and interests of
    particular patients incline them in different
    directions not only as to how, but even as to
    whether, treatment should be provided.

11
  • It is important to note that the ethical (and
    legal) imperative of informed consent does not
    give patient the right to insist upon anything
    they might want
  • Health professionals are also bound by the
    concept of non-maleficence, not causing harm.
  • The choices available to patients must be limited
    to medically accepted options, all of which
    scientific evidence indicates will have some
    possibility of promoting the patients welfare.

12
Opinion inJohn Canterbury versus William Spence
  • every human being of adult years and sound
    mind has a right to determine what shall be done
    with his body True consent to what happens to
    ones self is the informed exercise of a choice,
    and that entails an opportunity to evaluate
    knowledgeably the options available and the risks
    attendant upon each.

13
Major Components of Informed Consent
  • Disclosure of Adequate Information with
    Associated Patient Understanding
  • Lack of Coercion
  • Competence/Decisional Capacity

14
Four Standards Considered For Adequate Information
  • Full Disclosure
  • Customary Disclosure
  • Disclosure of all Risks
  • Reasonable Person Standard

15
Full Disclosure
  • Disclose every benefit and risk, no matter
    how small or remote.
  • Rejected
  • Too prohibitive and unrealistic. If taken
    literally, full disclosure is impossible. If
    taken, as probably intended, to reveal adequate
    information, the standard provides no guidance.

16
Customary Disclosure
  • Disclose all information that other
    practitioners would be likely to disclose under
    similar circumstances. (Also called community or
    professional standard.)
  • Rejected
  • Customary practice does not necessarily ensure
    that the patients right to self-determination is
    respected does not ensure that adequate
    information will be provided.

17
Disclose All Risks
  • Disclose every risk that a patient would deem
    significant to his decision.
  • Rejected
  • Places an undue burden on the practitioner in
    that it requires the practitioner to second guess
    the patients subjective view of what would count
    as significant information.

18
Reasonable Person Standard
  • Disclose the benefits and risks that a
    reasonable person, in what the practitioner knows
    to be the patients position, would be likely to
    deem relevant in deciding whether to forego a
    proposed therapy.
  • Accepted, on the grounds that the scope of
    the standard is not subjective as to the
    practitioner or the patient it remains objective
    with due regard for the patients informational
    needs and with suitable leeway for the
    practitioners situation.

19
Two Exceptions to the Rule of Disclosure
  • Emergency situations where the patient is
    incapable of giving consent, and harm from
    failure to treat is imminent and outweighs any
    harm threatened by the proposed treatment.
  • When disclosure of risks itself poses a threat of
    harm to the patient. However, this privilege
    does not accept the paternalistic notion that the
    practitioner may remain silent simply because
    divulgence might prompt the patient to forego
    therapy the practitioner feels the patient really
    needs.

20
Under the Reasonable Person Standard, Adequate
Information Generally Includes
  • Benefits
  • Risks
  • Complications
  • Alternatives
  • Prognosis
  • Non-Treatment
  • Costs

21
Lack of Coercion
  • Coercion is defined as a threat, either
    psychological or physical, of sufficient force
    that no rational person would be able to resist
    it.
  • Education and persuasion are not coercive.
  • Manipulation/deception and psychological or
    physical inducements of benefit or threats of
    harm are coercive.
  • Key idea is that the consent is fully voluntary.

22
Decisional Capacity
  • In much of the ethics literature, the term
    competency is used to designate decisional
    capacity. However, the term has taken on legal
    connotations with the decision regarding a
    persons competency determined by the courts.
    Thus, increasingly the term decisional capacity
    is employed to designate the third ingredient
    necessary for a consent to be informed/valid.

23
Decisional Making Capacity Requires
  • Possession of a set of values and goals.
  • The ability to communicate and to understand
    information, and
  • the ability to reason and deliberate about ones
    choices.
  • From The Presidents Commission for the Study
    of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical
    and Behavioral Research

24
Surrogate Decision Making
  • Examples of individuals who cannot rationally
    deliberate in the process of informed consent
    are
  • minors
  • persons with dementia
  • psychotics
  • persons with extreme anxiety or fear
  • the mentally retarded
  • persons under the influences of abused substances

25
Misconceptions About Informed Consent
  • Informed consent is merely a legal doctrine and
    has little to do with a good and ethical
    practice.
  • Informed consent is a single event.
  • Informed consent merely involves the listing of
    risks and benefits the dentist believes would
    best serve the patients interests.

26
  • Because of their special education and training,
    practitioners are the best judges of what would
    serve their patients best interests.
  • The primary obligation of the dentist is to act
    in the best interest of the patients health, as
    the dentist understands it.
  • It is permissible to forego informed consent so
    long as you are acting in the patients best
    interest.

27
  • Patients do not want to be informed of bad news
    and are always better served by practitioners
    remaining positive, even if it involves
    deception.
  • Any individual who would make a decision that is
    obvious to the practitioner as contrary to their
    health and well being is irrational.
  • The practitioners obligations do not extend
    beyond the legal requirements concerning informed
    consent.
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