Consent and Capacity Flashcards
what is the definition of consent?
- the voluntary and continuing permission of an appropriately informed individual who has the capacity to consent to the intervention in question
- based on sufficient knowledge of the purpose, nature, likely effects and risks of that treatment, including the likelihood of its success and any alternatives to it
- acquiescence under any unfair or undue pressure, or where the person does not know what the intervention entails, is not consent
what two things must consent always be?
- valid
- legal
what is the meaning of valid consent?
the consent:
- remains current
- was obtained recently enough
- specific to the proposed dental treatment only
how long does consent remain valid?
- consent should be a continuing process
- if there has been a significant interval between consent and treatment, consent should be renewed
- the patient should be given continuing opportunities to ask questions and renew any decisions made
what are the 3 main principles of legal consent?
- ABILITY
- INFORMED
- VOLUNTARY
what does the principle ‘ability’ refer to by means of obtaining legal consent?
the patient has the ability to make an informed decision
what does the principle ‘informed’ refer to by means of obtaining legal consent?
the patient has enough information to make a decision
what does the principle ‘voluntary’ refer to by means of obtaining legal consent?
the patient themselves made the decision (not coerced etc)
what is the meaning of capacity?
capacity is the power to act/make decisions
what are the different aspects that allow a person to have capacity?
- able to make a reasoned decision
- able to communicate said decision
- able to understand a decision
- able to retain the memory of a decision
when might a person not be able to make a reasoned decision?
if the decision is random or impulsive
when might a patient not be able to communicate a decision?
- poor/no english
- unconscious
how can you determine if a patient is able to understand a decision?
- must have cognitive thinking abilities
- must be able to understand consequences
can someone else lawfully give consent for another person if that person has capacity?
NO
what is meant by obtaining INFORMED consent?
- sufficient information must be communicated to the patient in order for them to make an informed decision about whether or not to accept the treatment
- this is based on appropriate knowledge and understanding