lunes, 14 de noviembre de 2016

BioEdge: A landmark case transforms informed consent in the UK

BioEdge: A landmark case transforms informed consent in the UK
Bioedge
A landmark case transforms informed consent in the UK
     

A ruling by a UK court last year forces doctors to tell their patients the full range of treatment options and allowing them to choose. The Royal College of Surgeons has warned of “a dramatic increase in the number of litigation pay-outs” made if doctors and hospitals do not make changes to the processes they use to gain consent from patients before surgery.
Traditionally it was up to British doctors to decide what risks to communicate to patients. But last year the UK Supreme Court held in a case called Montgomery vs Lanarkshire Health Board, that doctors must ensure patients are aware of any and all risks that an individual patient, not a doctor, might consider significant.
In other words, doctors can no longer be the sole arbiter of determining what risks are material to the patient.
In the past, litigation in malpractice suits was governed by the Bolam principle, which saw the judgement of medical experts as the main criterion for assessing reasonable care in negligence cases and for deciding what risks should be communicated to the patient for a chosen treatment.
Now the pendulum has swung from the “reasonable doctor” to the “reasonable patient”. This could mean a huge increase in the workload of doctors. A spokesman for the College said:
"It's not hard to see how in many hospitals gaining a patient’s consent has become a paper tick-box exercise, hurriedly done in the minutes before a patient is wheeled into theatre for their procedure. Operating lists and consultation clinics are packed leaving little time for these important consent discussions. Patients must be given enough time to make an informed decision about their treatment and hospitals are going to have to give serious thought to how they plan in time for these discussions.”
Philippa Taylor, a bioethicist with the Christian Medical Fellowship, in London, believes that the Montgomery ruling may have the unexpected consequence of curbing abortion in the UK.
There is no absolute legal requirement for the doctor to have seen a patient requesting an abortion, or to have a one-to-one conversation about personal values and beliefs. However the new ruling has now made it clear that in the consent process doctors should explore options with that specific patient in mind. Those who ignore or withhold information due to bias (or paternalism) are breaking the law.
It is also possible that doctors who withhold information on the risks of abortion, even if small, such as the now well recognised link between abortions and later preterm deliveries, and the link to adverse mental health consequences, and even on the possible link to breast cancer, evidenced in some research, may be at risk of now breaking the law. It seems that the case for independent abortion counselling and accurate information giving has just got stronger.
Bioedge
Bioedge
The shock of this week’s Presidential election in the United States has overshadowed other winners and losers on election night. Big Marijuana was a winner. Four states have legalised recreational marijuana and another four medical marijuana. Assisted suicide was a winner, with voters in Colorado passing a ballot initiative legalising it.
A big loser was the polling industry, which failed to predict Trump’s astonishing victory. This comes after other surprises (ie, failures) in the Brexit debate and the peace accord in Colombia.
And this has made pollsters’ clients suspicious. “A corporate market research project, you don’t know if your polling is shit because there’s no election day,” Dan Wagner, head of Democratic research firm Civis Analytics, told the Wall Street Journal. In politics, “there’s a day where you’re going to find out whether you were right or whether you’re an idiot.”
Since polling has become a weapon in bioethics policy debates on issues like euthanasia, abortion, or stem cell research, perhaps we can feel a bit more justified in our scepticism about polls which purport to show what the public thinks. It would be silly to say that polling is broken, but it certainly needs a good grease-and-oil change.

Michael Cook
Editor
BioEdge
This week in BioEdge

by Michael Cook | Nov 12, 2016
It's hard to know what direction the President-elect will take

by Michael Cook | Nov 12, 2016
Cecile Richards insists that its doors will remain open

by Xavier Symons | Nov 12, 2016
Colorado has voted for assisted suicide, while three other US states have voted to legalise recreational marijuana.

by Xavier Symons | Nov 12, 2016
A UK bill that would restrict disability-selective abortion has passed its second reading.

by Xavier Symons | Nov 12, 2016
Should religious viewpoints be admitted to the euthanasia debate?

by Michael Cook | Nov 12, 2016
A Norwegian ethicist says Yes.

by Michael Cook | Nov 12, 2016
Shift from the 'reasonable doctor' to the 'reasonable patient'
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