Autonomy, Paternalism, Consent Flashcards
What is autonomy
Deciding the direction in which one’s life should go
Promotes our best interests
We all have different values, priorities, aspirations, making us best placed to know what is in our own best interests
How could you navigate ‘bad’ medical decisions
There is more to wellbeing than medical wellbeing
Medical best interests are not the same as best interests overall
Why is choice and free will important
Being able to make meaningful choices is fundamental to being human
Without free will, we do not have moral responsibility
Making decisions, regardless of whether they are bad or good is important to flourishing as an individual
How would we respect autonomy in society
Society must enable individuals to develop and reflect on their values and must ensure that individuals feel confident to express their values and confident that their wishes will be respected
Autonomy must be respected for trivial and major choices
What do you need to make autonomous choices
-how can HCPs support patients make autonomous choices
Understand information
- provide adequate information
- clear explanations
- time to consider options
- no external pressures
- providing reasonable choices
Form values
-being non judgemental to the individual making the decision
Make decisions based on values and understanding of information
What is the value of enabling autonomy
Help doctors give better advice Enable better decision making Improve mutual understanding Improve trust Improve adherence
What kind of decision making do our patients want
Some want to doctor to make treatment decisions for them because they trust their doctors
-they still want to understand what is being proposed and why
Patients cite
- clear explanations
- truthfulness
- good communication as essential for building trust => patients feed confident that they have control over what is done to them
What are the limits to autonomy
If a decision puts others at harm
What is paternalism
-what form could this take
Overriding or undermining a patient’s autonomy based on the healthcare professional’s view of the patient’s best interests
Presenting only 1 side of the argument
Withholding information
Coercion
Lying
Withholding information
-is this morally the same as lying
No
- withholding information restricts autonomy less
- patients may actively collude in withholding of information
- impossible to tell patient everything
- less likely to cause mistrust
Yes
- if the intention is the same
- cannot assume that patient’s don’t want to know
- would not differ from lying if you know the patient would be influenced by the information
Is paternalism justified in the context of bad news
-how would you promote autonomy as much as possible
Most patients want to know their diagnosis
- many suspect before the doctor confirms it
- knowing the diagnosis and prognosis affects other decisions
- may increase distrust if they suspect the doctor is not being honest with them
The manner in which you break the bad news is important
Is paternalism justified in the context of risks and side effects
-how would you promote autonomy as much as possible
Risks and side effects are factual
The significance given to a specific risk or side effect is dependent on the individual’s values
Valuable to understand the patient’s perspective and ensure the patient has the correct information
Do doctors know best
Doctors are often best placed to make medical best interests decisions
Medical best interests ≠ overall best interests
-even close family members and friends may be mistaken about each other’s values and priorities
How would you manage a situation where there is disagreement between medical best interests and patient autonomy
If we accept the fundamental importance of autonomy, we must respect autonomy equally in all people capable of autonomous decision making
But what are the limits to autonomy?
We must apply these limits consistently
We could take a paternalistic approach if we believe that something else is in their best interests
-fine line between legitimate persuasion and undue pressure
-‘maternalism’ - use of guilt to change someone’s mind
But we can never know what is actually in someone’s best interests
Improved communication between the 2 parties to understand the different perspectives
What are the rights and duties of a pregnant patient
A pregnant patient does not lose any of their legal rights by virtue of being pregnant
-has the same legal right as any other competent adult