8 Medical Ethics and Informed Consent
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Transcript of 8 Medical Ethics and Informed Consent
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The Pillars of Medical Ethics and the Ethical Basis for Law
Charles Ellington, MD, JDSIU School of Medicine
Decatur Family Medicine Residency
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Objectives
• Describe the pillars of medical ethics, including non-maleficence, beneficence, autonomy, and justice
• Explain their limitations and clinical application
• Discuss basic legal principles that flow from the above, including informed consent
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Pillars of Medical Ethics
• Non-Maleficence• Beneficence• Autonomy• Distributive Justice
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Non-Maleficence
• Primum non nocere: First do no harm• Hippocratic oath: “I will use treatment to
help the sick according to my ability and judgment, but will never use it to injure or wrong them.”
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First rule of ethics
• Many argue overrides all other ethical concerns
• Clinical Case– A transplant surgeon kills a death row inmate
so he may harvest his heart and liver, thus saving two lives. Is this ethical?
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First rule of ethics?
• An oncologist gives chemotherapy to a woman with breast cancer in hopes of curing her cancer. Unfortunately, she develops congestive heart failure as a result of her treatment. Is this ethical?
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Negligence
• The concept of medical malpractice or negligence is related to the duty no to harm
• Medical negligence occurs when a physician breaches a duty and as a result of that breach, harms a patient
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Beneficence
• An action done to benefit others• Hippocratic Oath: physicians will “come for
the benefit of the sick”• Differs from non-maleficence in that
beneficence is a positive requirement for action, whereas non-maleficence is a negative prohibition against action
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Is Beneficence Obligatory?
• A physician is driving down the street and sees an automobile accident. Is the physician morally obligated to respond?
• What if the physician is an opthalmologist?• Are there times when beneficence is
required by ethics? By law?
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Required Beneficence
• Specific beneficence: directed at specific parties such as children, patients, etc.
• General beneficence: directed to society in general
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Required Beneficence
• What are some specific positive actions the law requires of physicians or others?
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Physician-Patient Relationship
• Is created when a patient requests and a physician agrees to provide medical care
• Creates special obligations for physician– Provide medical care in accordance with
standard of care– Not abandon patient (provide care if needed
until relationship properly terminated)
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Paternalism
• Deciding what is best for another person and overriding their preferences or choices
• At tension with autonomy
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Paternalism
• At a routine visit, you notice a 55 year-old patient of yours has never had a mammogram. On questioning, the patient says she prefers not to have one—that they are uncomfortable and she does not see the need. You explain mammograms save lives, and instruct your nurse to schedule a mammogram as soon as possible. Is this ethical? What if you simply handed her an order and told her to make the appointment?
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Paternalism
• A 68 year-old male patient of yours suffers from alzheimer’s dementia. He develops hemoptysis, hoarseness, and weight loss. CT scan shows suspected late stage bronchogenic carcinoma. The patient’s wife pleads with you not to tell her husband the suspected diagnosis because she is concerned he may kill himself if he finds out. What should you do?
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Autonomy
• Principle of self-rule or self-governance• Based on respect for individual and value
of a person as an end in itself• Also influenced by humility—it is difficult or
impossible to know what is best for someone else
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Preconditions for Autonomy
• Liberty or freedom to choose• Agency or capacity to choose
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Rules Flowing from Autonomy
• Truth telling• Confidentiality and privacy• Informed consent
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Informed Consent
• A communication process between the physician and patient whereby a fully informed patient can participate in healthcare decision-making
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Legal Duty
• A physician has a legal duty to inform the patient of the condition, differential diagnoses, the purpose of tests, treatment options, risks, alternatives, prognosis and expectations
Canterbury v. Spence, 464 F.2d 772 (D.C. Cir. 1972)
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Preconditions
• Patient must have capacity to consent– If at issue, document process for determining
if someone has capacity• If a patient lack capacity, a surrogate
decision-maker must provide informed consent
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What Must Be Disclosed
• Nature of treatment or procedure• Expected outcome and likelihood of
success• Reasonable alternatives• Material risks
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Material Risks
• Risks that are very slight or rare do not have to be disclosed
• Some states require any risk that would impact a patient’s decision be disclosed
• Alternative treatments that carry fewer risks must be disclosed
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Legal Standard Applied
• Professional disclosure standard (majority including IL): Was the disclosure or non-disclosure consistent with the community medical practice
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Special Cases
• Pediatric patients• Emancipated minors• Mature minors• Pregnant patients• Minors seeking certain care (STD
treatment or birth control; drug, ETOH, or psychiatric treatment)
• Emergencies
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Exceptions
• Therapeutic privilege• Patient asks not to be informed• Common knowledge• Emergency
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Informed Refusal
• Corollary to informed consent• Places a duty on physician to disclose
material risks for refusing to undergo low risk procedure (e.g. pap smear)Truman v. Thomas, 165 Cal Rptr. 308, 611 P.2d 902 (1980).
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Distributive Justice
• Fair, equitable, and appropriate distribution of resources
• Especially relevant for healthcare– 45 million Americans uninsured– Significant healthcare disparities
• Distribution of scarce resources always requires hard choices
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Theories of Justice
• Utilitarian: the greatest good for the greatest number
• Libertarian: focuses on protecting liberty and property
• Communitarian: focuses on responsibility of the community to the individual and based on pluralism
• Egalitarian: basic equalities among individuals
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Is healthcare a right?
• What is the scope of the right?• Against whom is this right asserted?• What are the responsibilities of those
possessing such a right?• Is the right to healthcare a positive or
negative right?
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Clinical Case
• You’re a physician serving on a state healthcare reform task force. One issue that has arisen is whether the state will pay for liver transplants for alcoholic related end stage liver disease. One proposal is not to pay at all. Another proposal is to pay for it, but place these patients below those without alcohol related disease. What will you recommend and what programs are you willing to cut to pay for it?
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Summary
• The four pillars of medical ethics provide important guidance for physician behavior
• Non-maleficence is considered the first principle of medical ethics but cannot be viewed as isolated from the other principles
• Beneficence requires acting in the best interest of another but can become paternalistic
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Summary-Cont.
• Autonomy is grounded in respect for the individual and serves as the basis for several ethical rules including informed consent
• Informed consent requires a physician disclose the nature of the proposed treatment or procedure, expected benefit of proposed treatment and liklihood of success material risks, and alternatives
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Summary—Cont.
• Distributive justice seeks to make and equitable distribution of scarce resources but always requires hard choices
• Ethical theories often overlap and not always separable