ASIPP Ethics Questions Flashcards
1
Q
- The new JCAHO standards require which of the following:
A. The use of intravenous morphine
B. Frequent assessment of a patient’s pain
C. Successful treatment of a patient’s pain
D. Recording of the physician’s satisfaction
E. Demonstrated use of the analgesic ladder algorithm
A
- Answer: B
2
Q
- A young adult is in rehabilitation after suffering a closed
head injury and a fracture of the femur in an automobile
accident. Which of the following psychometric
assessments would be most useful in the detection of
brain damage?
A. Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
B. Bender-Gestalt Test
C. California Personality Inventory
D. Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
E. Millon Behavioral Health Inventory (MBHI)
A
- Answer: B
Explanation:
(Kaplan, p 201-203.)
The Bender-Gestalt Test can be useful in the assessment
of maturation and of brain damage. Various atypical
responses to the Rorschach cards (e.g., poor form
responses) also have been found to be related to
brain damage. The Bender-Gestalt Test consists
of nine test figures that a subject is asked to copy;
difficulties in this easy task often are indicative of brain
dysfunction. Neither the Thematic Apperception Test nor
the California Personality Inventory has been found to be
a sensitive indicator of cerebral damage. The MMPI tests a
wide range of personality factors and the MBHI is a
psychodiagnostic inventory of personality, coping style,
and symptoms for the physically ill. Other than a few
cognitive factors, neither is adequate for the detection of
brain damage. Another frequently used test for brain
damage is the Halstead-Reitan Battery of
neuropsychological tests.
Source: Ebert 2004
3
Q
- Informed consent
A. Is a tool that physicians utilize to avoid litigation, ensuring
best outcomes.
B. Requires the patient’s family or signifi cant other to be
aware of physician comments.
C. Is binding in circumstance such as surgery where other
procedures must be performed.
D. A tool for the physician to explain risk complication options
to procedure and review with the patient the risk
and reward of procedure.
E. In any format (implied, oral, written, general) is equivalent
in meeting criteria required in any situation
A
- Answer: D
4
Q
- Written consent
A. Is considered the same as general consent.
B. A written consent addresses individual treatment with
inherent risk and reward.
C. A written consent is always binding, and may be signed
by immediate family members.
D. Is the least common type of consent obtained.
E. A written consent is inferior to implied consent.
A
- Answer: B
5
Q
- Choose the correct statement related to Fraud and
Abuse.
A. The Anti-kickback Statue allows a clinical lab to increase
its Medicare business by offering to perform certain
tests for free.
B. Under Stark physician self-referral rules, a clinical lab
that receives Medicare referrals from a physician practice
may provide the doctors with free offi ce equipment
solely to store information regarding patient specimens.
C. It is legal for a clinical lab to write off charges for a physician’s
managed care business in exchange for referrals
of Medicare non-managed care patients.
D. The clinical labs are not required to ensure that they have
access to the supporting documentation of physicians
who order services from them.
E. A clinical lab may alter a physician’s order without his or
her (or authorized individual’s) consent in order to bill
Medicare more correctly.
A
- Answer: B
Explanation:
A. A supplier cannot offer to perform tests at a discounted
rate or for free in order to induce the ordering of Medicare
tests.
Penalties include a felony conviction, up to a $25,000
fi ne and/or fi ve years in prison, plus possible exclusion
from Medicare, Medicaid or other federal health care
programs.
In addition, as added by the Balanced Budget Act of
1997, a convicted provider also could be hit with a civil
money penalty of up to $50,000 for each act, plus damages
of three times the amount of the kickback, whether or not
a portion of the kickback was legal.
B. Equipment rental is a key concept under both the Anti-
Kickback Statue and the stark II regulations, in one case
because appropriate rentals may be protected under a safe
Harbor and in the other because they may be protected
under an exception. According to Stark, physicians should use supplies
provided at no cost by a lab for that lab only and not
accept more supplies than they will use.
For example, if a physician’s offi ce tends to send about
400 blood tests a year to a particular lab, the number of
items or supplies accepted from the lab should be
commensurate with the expected volume of tests.
If not, the receipt of these items or supplies could
createa fi nancial relationship within the meaning of
the stark law.
Items provided must be used solely to collect, store,
process or transport specimens in order to avoid stark
violations.
Specialized equipment such as disposable or reusable
aspiration or injection needles and snares are not solely
collection or storage devices.
Computers and fax machines, although also used to
store data, are not viewed as solely collection or storage
devices.
The Anti-kickback Statute takes a different stance on
free equipment.
Whenever a lab offers or gives a referral source
anything of value that’s not paid for at fair market value,
OIG draws the inference that the thing of value is offered
to induce the referral of business.
By fair market value, OIG means value for general
commercial purposes.
However, in the health care context, fair market value
also must refl ect an arms-length transaction unadjusted to
include the additional value that one or both parties might
attribute to the referral of business between them.
Under the anti-kickback law, an arrangement that
would normally violate the law is protected if it fi ts into a
safe harbor. The Equipment Rental Safe Harbor is
designed to give providers guidance on how to comply
with the law when renting equipment from entities to
which physicians refer. Arrangements must meet the
following 6 standards:
Leases must be in writing and signed by the parties.
The lease covers all equipment leased between the
parties and specifi es the equipment it covers.
If the lease gives the renter access to the equipment for
only periodic intervals rather than full-time use, the lease
must specify exactly the schedule of the intervals and their length,
The lease must be for a term of at least one year.
The aggregate rent for the lease must be set in advance,
must be at fair market value, and can’t be linked to
referrals or other business generated between the parties.
The amount of equipment rented is not greater than is
reasonable for the commercial purpose of the rental.
C. Managed care plans might require a physician or other
provider to use only the lab with which the plan has
negotiated a fee schedule. In these situations, the plan
usually will refuse to pay claims submitted by other labs.
The provider, however, may use a different lab and may
wish to continue to use that lab for non-managed care
patients. In order to keep the provider as a client, the lab
that doesn’t have the managed care contract may agree to
do the managed care work free of charge.
The legality of these types of agreements under the
Anti-Kick back Statue depends in part on the kind of
contractual relationship between the managed care plan
and its providers.
Under the terms of many managed care contracts, a
provider will get a bonus or other payment.
For proper utilization managed care plans threaten
fi nancial penalties if the provider’s utilization of services
exceeds present levels.
When a lab agrees to write off charges for a physician’s
managed care work, the physician may receive a fi nancial
benefi t from the managed care plan because of the
appearance the utilization of tests has been reduced.
In cases in which providing services for free results in a
benefi t to the provider, the Anti Kick-back Statue is
involved.
If free services are offered or accepted in return for the
referral of Medicare, Medicaid or other state health care
program business, both the lab and the physician may be
violating the statute.
There is no exception in the law or safe harbor
regulation that gives immunity to any party involved in
this kind of activity because the Medicare or Medicaid
programs don’t get the benefi t of these free services.
D. While OIG recognizes that labs don’t treat patients or
make medical necessity determinations and that physicians
may order any of a wide range of tests they feel are
appropriate for their patients, it nonetheless says that there
are steps labs can and should take to make sure that they
bill only for tests that meet government reimbursement
rules. One such step is communicating to physicians that
the claim will be paid only for services that are covered,
reasonable and medically necessary.
On request, a lab should also be able to give
documentation
supporting the medical necessity of a service billed to a
government program, such as requisition forms that have
diagnosis codes. Alternatively, the lab must be able to get
this supporting documentation from the physician who
ordered the test, an authorized person on the physician’s
staff or another person authorized by law to order tests.
OIG states that labs are in a unique position to give
referring physicians information on Medicare rules
governing medical necessity, especially on which specifi c
tests (such as screening tests) don’t meet Medicare rules.
In OIG’s opinion, labs can and should give physicians such
advice.
E. A clinical lab may not alter a physician’s order without
consent.
6
Q
- Ethical dilemmas for the delivery of healthcare include
A. The issue of rigidity in medication delivery
B. The need to consider the emotional or social aspect of
the pain patient
C. Biopsychosocialeconomic impact of chronic pain
D. Patient’s relationship with his or her close relatives
E. Financial issues
A
- Answer: D
Source: Raj, Pain Review 2nd Edition
7
Q
- Which of the following is not an appropriate strategy for
helping patients make healthcare decisions?
A. If the patient’s situation is not emergent emphasize they
do not have to decide immediately on a treatment option.
B. Have paper & pens available for the patient to take
notes.
C. Provide intellectually appropriate articles explaining the
patient’s condition and treatment options.
D. Provide your patients with a list of websites you think are
reliable and contain helpful information.
E. Describe the treatment options in esoteric terms.
A
- Answer: E
Source: Weinberg M, Board Review 2004
8
Q
- Which of the following are appropriate strategies for
helping patients make healthcare decisions?
A. Provide patients with a list of support groups so they can
hear what treatment options other patients have chosen
and what benefi ts & burdens they have experienced.
B. Ask the patient about their “decision-making model.”
C. Try to have the patient’s surrogate present at all signifi -
cant conversations.
D. Ask the patient to develop a list of those activities that
gives their life meaning so you can discuss their illness
and the benefi ts & burdens of the various treatment options
within the context of their everyday life.
E. All of the above.
A
- Answer: E
Source: Weinberg M, Board Review 2004
9
Q
- The ethical basis of pain medicine involves:
A. intellectual domains that engage theoretical, empirical
and contextual knowledge
B. practical domains that utilize particular skills, together
with the subtleties of medicine as ‘art’
C. appropriate balance of technologic application, objectivity
and subjectivity
D. all of the above
A
- Answer: D
Explanation:
The ethical practice of pain medicine is the enactment of
the role of the physician as both a therapeutic and moral
agent. As such, the physician must utilize intellectual skills
that engage distinct types and ways of knowledge, practical
skills and subtle, somewhat more esoteric capacities in
enabling medicine as an art and science. This includes
balancing objective information (gained through
technologic means) and subjective knowledge of the
patient as a person to determine what should be done to
render the most appropriate therapeutics.
(Giordano J. On knowing: The use of knowledge and
intellectual virtues in practical pain management. Practical
Pain Management 2006; 6(3): 66-69)
Source: Giordano J, Board Review 2006
10
Q
- Medical ethics can best be described as
A. Proper conduct in patient relations
B. Proper care of the patient
C. Proper appearance of the physician when fi rst encountering
the patient
D. Proper documentation of the examination of the patient
E. Proper billing practices
A
- Answer: A
Source: Raj, Pain Review 2nd Edition
11
Q
- Ethics can be defi ned as:
A. a set of morals that are based upon the beliefs of a group
of people
B. a consensus of right and just behaviors
C. the formal, critical study of morality
D. all of the above
A
- Answer: C
Explanation:
Ethics is the study of moral affi rmations, actions and
patterns of behavior that refl ect these foundations in
individuals and groups (Giordano J. Moral agency in pain
medicine: Philosophy, practice and virtue. Pain Physician
2006; 9: 41-46)
Source: Giordano J, Board Review 2006
12
Q
- This form of euthanasia involves a patient who asks for
a life-sustaining intervention to be withheld or withdrawn.
A. Voluntary Active Euthanasia
B. Voluntary Passive Euthanasia
C. Involuntary Passive Euthanasia
D. Involuntary Active Euthanasia
E. Physician Assisted Suicide
A
- Answer: B
Source: Weinberg M, Board Review 2004
13
Q
- The Oregon Death with Dignity Act requires the following,
EXCEPT:
A. The diagnosis and prognosis must be confi rmed by a
second physician.
B. The patient must be informed of alternatives to assisted
suicide, including hospice.
C. The patient must sign a waiver releasing the physician
from all liability.
D. Physicians must report the provision of a lethal prescription
to the Health Department
E. Physicians must request, but cannot require, the patient
to notify their family
A
- Answer: C
Source: Weinberg M, Board Review 2004
14
Q
- The reasonable person standard requires patients to be
provided with the following information, except:
A. The (suspected) diagnosis
B. All reasonable treatment alternatives, including doing
nothing
C. A description of reasonably foreseeable burdens for each
treatment alternatives, including doing nothing
D. A description of reasonably foreseeable benefi ts treatment
alternatives, including doing nothing
E. An explanation of all theoretical risks.
A
- Answer: E
Source: Weinberg M, Board Review 2004
15
Q
- When can you give medical information about a patient
to another person or entity other than the patient?
A. Work Comp Carrier
B. Malpractice lawyer who is suing you
C. Life insurance agent
D. Patient’s employer
E. Patient’s ex wife
A
- Answer: A
16
Q
- This form of euthanasia involves a patient who has
lost decision-making capacity and has not expressed
end-of-life treatment preferences. The patient is given
something with the explicit intention to cause death.
A. Voluntary Active Euthanasia
B. Voluntary Passive Euthanasia
C. Involuntary Passive Euthanasia
D. Involuntary Active Euthanasia
E. Physician Assisted Suicide
A
- Answer: D
Source: Weinberg M, Board Review 2004