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The physician is required to provide enough information to
allow a patient to make an informed judgment about how to proceed. The
physician's presentation should be understandable to the patient, should be
unbiased and should include the physician's recommendation. The patient's or
surrogate's concurrence must be free and uncoerced. The principle and practice
of informed consent relies on patients to ask questions when they are uncertain
about the information they receive, to think carefully about their choices and
to be forthright with their physicians about their values, concerns, and
reservations about a particular recommendation. Once patients and physicians
decide on a course of action, patients should make every reasonable effort to
carry out the aspects of care that are in their control or to inform their
physicians promptly if it is not possible to do so. The physician is obligated
to ensure that the patient or the surrogate is adequately informed about the
nature of the patient's medical condition and the objectives, alternatives,
possible outcomes and risks involved with a proposed treatment.
All
adult patients are considered competent to make decisions about medical care
unless a court declares them incompetent. In clinical practice, however,
physicians and family members usually make decisions without a formal competency
hearing in the courts for patients who lack decision-making capacity. This
clinical approach can be ethically justified if the physician has carefully
determined that the patient is incapable of understanding the nature of the
proposed treatment, the alternatives to it and the risks, benefits and
consequences of it. When a patient lacks decision-making capacity (that is, the
ability to receive and express information and to make a choice consonant with
that information and one's values), an appropriate surrogate should make
decisions with the physician. Ideally, surrogate decision makers should know the
patient's preferences and act in the best interests of the patient. If the
patient has designated a proxy, as through a durable power of attorney for
health care, that choice should be respected. When patients have not selected
surrogates, standard clinical practice is that family members serve as
surrogates. Some states designate the order in which family members will serve
as surrogates. Physicians should be aware of legal requirements in their state
for surrogate appointment and decision making. In some cases, all parties may
agree that a close friend is a more appropriate surrogate than a relative.
Physicians should take reasonable care to ensure that the surrogate's decisions
are consistent with the patient's preferences and best interests. When possible,
these decisions should be reached in the medical setting by physicians,
surrogates and other caregivers. Physicians should emphasize to surrogates that
decisions should be based on what the patient would want, not what surrogates
would choose for themselves. If disagreements cannot be resolved, hospital
ethics committees may be helpful. Courts should be used when doing so serves the
patient, such as to establish guardianship for an unbefriended, incompetent
patient, to resolve a problem when other processes fail, or to comply with state
law.
Decisions
about Reproduction
The
ethical duty to disclose relevant information about human reproduction to the
patient may conflict with the physician's personal moral standards on abortion,
sterilization or contraception. A physician who objects to these services need
not become involved, whether by offering advice to the patient or by involvement
in a procedure. As in any other medical situation, the physician has a duty to
refer the patient to an appropriate source for the full range of options so that
the patient's legal options are not constrained.
If
a patient who is a minor requests termination of pregnancy, advice on
contraception or treatment of sexually transmitted diseases without a parent's
knowledge, the physician may attempt to persuade the patient of the benefits of
having parents involved, but should be aware that a conflict may exist between
the legal duty to maintain confidentiality and the obligation toward parents or
guardians. Information should not be provided to others without the patient's
permission. In such cases, the physician should be guided by his or her
conscience in light of the law.
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