consent and capacity Flashcards

1
Q

Canadian perspectives

A

determination
–– Right to say no

Right to be involved in
decision-making process

–– Right to confidentiality

 More universal
Treat persons as
‘ends-in-themselves’,
not as a means to annot as a means to an
endend

Another definition

Disputes among reasonable
people about what constitutes
right action….

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2
Q

Ethics and Law

A

Legality and morality are often confused.
But they are not the same, since an action
can be legal without being moral, and vice versa

 Laws do reflect morals, however, and are
often thought to be ‘morally codified

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3
Q

How do you balance these
principles?

A

– Patient self-determination (autonomy)
– Duty to help (‘beneficence’) & try to do
no harm (‘non-maleficence’)
– Fairness (‘justice’)

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4
Q

Consent and Ethics…

A

Ethically based informed consent goes far
beyond “agreeing to” or the “granting of” permission

It is rather the respectful process of providing
information, answering questions and aligning
the proposed intervention with the values and wishes of the patient.

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5
Q

Ethics, autonomy advocacy

A

Generally our first duty is to autonomous
choice before health care perceptions of
best interests.

 Well established in law
.
 Advocacy is first directed to capable patient choice.

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6
Q

Why is consent such a
problem?

A

Research shows that a significant number of
people in health care do not fully understand the
legal and ethical foundation of consent.

 A great deal of confusion exists related to “bestA great interests”.

 Many people are receiving poor modelling in
obtaining and respecting consent.

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7
Q

The growing challenge of Consent

A

Aging population with higher levels of cognitive
impairment.

 Increased social/legal awareness.

 Never have issues of consent and capacity been
more important

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8
Q

Emerging from Paternalism

A

Doctor knows best”
 Medical facts and choices without values or choice

 Poorly aligned with a mature democratic
society

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9
Q

Paternalism and justice

A

Women greatly disadvantaged.

 Minorities greatly disadvantaged.

 Little to know variation for diversity and
personal choice

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10
Q

What is capacity?

A

A person is considered to have capacity with respectto making a treatment decision if he/she:

A) has the ability to understand the information
that is relevant to the treatment decision

 B) is able to appreciate the foreseeable
consequences of consenting or refusing treatment

C) is able to reach a decision

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11
Q

Criterion 1:
Understand

A

As a construct, to ‘understand’ refers to a
person’s cognitive abilities to factually grasp and
retain information.

 To the extent that a person must demonstrate
understanding through communication, the
ability to express oneself (verbally or through
symbols or gestures) is also implied

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12
Q

Criterion 2:Appreciate

A

 Can the patient evaluate his/her decision?

 The ‘appreciate’ standard attempts to capture
the evaluative nature of capable decision
making, and reflects the attachment of personal
meaning to the facts of a given situation.

 Explores both patient’s reasoning process and
personal meaning given to various outcomes

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13
Q

Global Incapacity has no legal
bearing

A

Many healthcare workers continue to believe in
the concept of global incapacity, that is a patient or client either has or does not have capacity to
make decisions.

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14
Q

Capacity evaluation

A

Capacity evaluation is the responsibility of the healthcare provider who proposes the treatment

 It is evaluated by asking the patient questions related to the treatment decision

It is critical to remain focused on the fact that capacity is decision-specific

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15
Q

The Nature of Capacity

A

Capacity can be::

1) A matter of degree

2) Can be highly variable

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16
Q

The anatomy of consent

A

Must be voluntary

 Must be capable

 Must be informed

17
Q

Voluntary

A

Protection from contrary family opinions

 Protection from contrary helping profession opinions

 Must not be obtained with any sense of obligation or indebtedness to care givers

18
Q

Capable

A

Not a matter of our interpretation of best
interests

 Does the patient understand what is being proposed

 Does the patient appreciate what is being proposed.

19
Q

What are the prerequisites to
informed consent?

A

A person is capable with respect to a treatment if the person is:

 A) able to understand the information that is relevant to making a decision about about the treatment
 B) able to appreciate the reasonably foreseeable consequences of a decision or lack of decision