Title: Are%20There%20Limits%20to%20Patient%20Autonomy?
1Challenges in Medicine, Law, and Ethics with
Advance Directives and DNR Orders (POST) January
14, 2014
- Are There Limits to Patient Autonomy?
- Elizabeth Heitman, PhD
- Vanderbilt University Medical Center
- Center for Biomedical Ethics and Society
2Objectives
- Define the concept of autonomy in contemporary
medical ethics, particularly related to informed
consent and the use of advance directives in
end-of-life decision making - Examine the kinds of knowledge that shape
patients capacity for autonomous choices in
end-of-life care and how caregivers can enhance
that knowledge.
3Human Limits
- All human activity has practical limits -- -
Knowledge, physical ability, time, courage - Illness introduces additional, new practical
limits but also new knowledge, experience,
insights - Human activity also has social and moral limits
that typically depend on these practical limits - - Focus on the practical
4Definition of Autonomy
- Self (autos) rule, governance (nomos)
- Self determination, exercise of free will,
individual choice - No right is held more sacred or is more
carefully - guarded by the common law than the right of every
- individual to the possession and control of his
own - person, free from all restraints or interference
by others, - unless by clear and unquestionable authority of
law. - Union Pacific R. Co. vs. Botsford,
141 U.S. 250 (1891)
5Conditions for Autonomy
- Virtually all theories of autonomy identify
two essential conditions for an individual to be
autonomous - Liberty or independence from controlling forces
- Agency or capacity for intentional action
- Principles of Biomedical Ethics, 5th ed.,
- Tom L. Beauchamp James F. Childress,
- Oxford University Press, 2001, p. 58
6Definition of Autonomy
- Autonomy is not an univocal concept in either
ordinary English or contemporary philosophy and
needs to be refined in light of particular
objectives. -
- Principles of Biomedical Ethics, 5th ed.,
- Tom L. Beauchamp James F. Childress,
- Oxford University Press, 2001, p. 58
7Definition of Patient Autonomy
- Self-determination and direction of the course of
- ones medical treatment, according to ones
- own values and preferences.
- Every human being of adult years and sound mind
has - a right to determine what shall be done with his
own - body.
- Schloendorff vs. Society of New York
Hospital, 105 N.W. 92 (1914) -
-
8Primary Aspects of Autonomy
- Autonomous person focus on capacity for self
determination, moral agency - Autonomous choice focus on independent,
informed decision making and action - Principles of Biomedical Ethics, 5th ed.,
- Tom L. Beauchamp James F. Childress,
- Oxford University Press, 2001, p. 58
9Context of Patient Autonomy
- Patient autonomy typically has been defined in
- terms of a legal and moral right to decide and to
- make choices about ones body, health, and
- medical treatment in the social context of a
- therapeutic relationship with physicians and
- health care institutions who are also involved in
- the decisions and subsequent action.
10Autonomy and Informed Consent
- Both law and ethics focus on the process and
content of informed consent as the means to
safeguard and promote patient autonomy through a
partnership that is also potentially an
adversarial relationship. - Open communication through informed consent
creates and sustains partnership and prevents
conflict.
11Autonomy in the Ethical Ideal of Informed Consent
- Informed consent promotes patient autonomy
- through shared decision making
- The physician presents reasonable medical options
for benefit, consistent with standards of good
clinical practice and professional judgment. - The informed patient chooses from among those
options, consistent with his or her personal
values.
12The patients ability to give informed consent
depends on
- The patient capacity for decision making
- The patients freedom of choice (freedom from
coercion) - The physicians adequate disclosure of
information regarding the decision or choice to
be made - The patients sufficient comprehension of that
information to make a reasoned decision or choice.
13Legally adequate disclosure includes the
patients comprehension of
- The diagnosis for which intervention is proposed
- The nature and purpose of the intervention
- The intended benefits and anticipated risks of
intervention and - Alternatives to the proposed intervention, their
intended benefits and anticipated risks,
including the benefits and risks of doing nothing.
14The Limits of Patient Autonomy - 1
- The traditional definition of informed consent
limits - the patients options to those presented by the
- physician as medically reasonable for the
patients - circumstances and consistent with standards of
- professional practice. Thus patients have
- Extensive freedom to refuse intervention
- Limited ability to demand interventions not
recommended or offered to them
15Informed Consent and Autonomy in End-of-Life Care
in the 1970s-1980s
- Was consent necessary for life-saving treatment?
- Could a patient refuse intervention if refusal
would lead to death? - - if competent?
- - if terminally ill?
- US courts repeatedly affirmed the right of an
autonomous individual to refuse medical
intervention, even if refusal would lead to his
or her death.
16Extending Patients Autonomy into the Uncertain
Future
- In the 1970s, early proponents of living wills
- claimed that the right to informed consent
extended - to decisions made by autonomous patients in the
- present about possible treatment options in an
- uncertain future.
- Advance directives were developed so that
- autonomous individuals (often not yet patients)
- Could document consent or refusal for
hypothetical - treatments in advance of need.
17The Limits of Patient Autonomy - 2
- What knowledge does the autonomous patient
- need today to make autonomous decisions and
- about choices about hypothetical decisions in the
- uncertain future? Is the standard of disclosure
for - informed consent possible?
- The diagnosis for which intervention is proposed
- The nature and purpose of the intervention
- Its intended benefits and anticipated risks
- Alternatives, their intended benefits and
anticipated risks
18How do individuals (patients) develop treatment
preferences about EOL care?
- Information from authoritative medical sources
- Patient education materials
- Authoritative internet sites
- Information from unofficial sources
- Popular media (both as information and stories)
- Family and friends
- Personal experience with others illness and
death - Limited and inconsistent for most Americans
19The Limits of Patient Autonomy - 3
- What knowledge do autonomous individuals need
- to make autonomous decisions and choices about
- future medical intervention?
- Factual (intellectual) medical knowledge
- Likely diagnoses, interventions, effectiveness
- Self knowledge
- Personal values, preferences, fears, sources of
meaning - Experiential knowledge and related insight
- Coping with uncertainty, pain, suffering, limits,
loss - Sources of resilience
20Efforts to promote patients autonomy
procedurally through advance directives need to
include efforts to provide multi-faceted
knowledge for autonomous choice about EOL care.
- The real ways we die
- The potential and limits of medical intervention
- The real costs of EOL care (financial, personal)
- Skills for facing uncertainty
- The transformative experience of a good death
21The Limits of Patient Autonomy - 4
- Institutional policies and procedures for
decision - making at the end of life EOL care that focus on
- traditional disclosure of risks and benefits
stress - generalized factual information, not evidence
- based, knowledge in context.
- Patients are unlikely to make autonomous EOL care
- decisions with only this incomplete medical
knowledge. - Gaps in experiential and self knowledge may lead
- seemingly autonomous patients to make choices
- inconsistent with their true values or
preferences.
22Do your institutions policies support or hinder
patients autonomous decision making and
meaningful choices ?
- CPR and DNR/ DNI orders (incl. in the OR)
- Dialysis
- Tubal feeding and hydration
- Advance directives
- Surrogate decision making