Health care providers treating patients need to obtain patient consent before proceeding. The same holds for medical researchers carrying out research on human subjects.
This consent can be truly “informed” only after the patient or subject understands the nature of the test, treatment, or research and the possible risks and benefits. The process of obtaining informed consent typically results in a document or form signed by the patient or subject stating that he or she agrees to allow the test, procedure, or study to be carried out.
Controversy about the topic of informed consent includes the issues of whether legal and moral understandings of informed consent are different, whether the moral requirements for informed consent are ever truly met, and under what circumstances providers may provide treatment in the absence of informed consent.
Legal requirements: In many parts of the world, and certainly in the United States, providers and healthcare institutions are legally required to obtain informed consent from patients before administering tests, procedures, and other therapeutic interventions, and before allowing participation in research studies. This legal requirement is commonly considered satisfied if:
Various interpretations exist of the necessary conditions for a patient to possess decision-making capacity:
The determination of whether a patient possesses decisional capacity is sometimes difficult to make and open to question. When a patient’s awareness is compromised by sedation or the nature of the illness or injury, the determination of whether the “consenting” patient really possesses decision-making capacity may affect the decision to proceed with treatment.
The patient must not only be able to provide consent, the patient must actually give consent. Usually this is indicated by the patient signing his or her name to a statement saying consent is being given. In some contexts oral consent or something less than a signature may be considered sufficient, though an impartial third party may be required as a witness that consent was given.
The claim of informed consent might be challenged if it is shown that the consent was obtained by coercion of the patient (or subject) or the consent was given under duress.
Moral requirements: Some ethicists believe that the true moral requirements for informed consent are more extensive than merely having a patient with decisional capacity and a signed consent document. The principle of respect for patient autonomy, for instance, may be held to require that it be verified that the patient or subject truly understands the nature and other details of the intervention. On this view, the provider should engage the patient in dialogue until the provider is sure the patient really understands what has been explained.
For example, in a particular jurisdiction the legal requirements of informed consent may be satisfied and yet any of the following still have occurred:
Any of the above in the right circumstances could prevent the patient or research subject from understanding important details of the nature of the intervention or research study or voluntarily giving his or her consent.
To ensure truly informed consent, the following practices have been suggested. In certain contexts some of these may not be practical or needed.
In the context of actual healthcare delivery in hospitals and medical offices, the above guidelines probably represent more of an ideal than common practice. Certainly many times patients have been asked to give consent without receiving a full explanation of the nature and possible risks of the procedure. For example, often the patient undergoing a routine blood test will not be advised about possible complications of the blood draw.
The patient undergoing a surgical intervention in a major hospital will almost certainly be presented with a detailed consent form to sign, though it might be presented very close in time to the actual procedure. They, as well as smaller medical practices, may have a more general blanket consent form to sign. In the case of minor routine tests sometimes no consent form is presented to the patient. In some instances consent is considered implied by the continued physical presence of the patient.
Critics sometimes charge that truly informed consent is impossible or never occurs. A variety of reasons are given for this view:
Far from respecting patient autonomy, critics charge, the illusion of informed consent serves only to masquerade paternalism on the part of the physician or healthcare team.
Defenders of the concept of informed consent try to blunt or refute these criticisms along the following lines:
Reimbursement for medical research participation presents a special case where critics charge informed consent is unlikely due to the coercive power of the prospect of payment. Significant amounts of cash or providing a subject with an appliance or other goods or services may be too strong to resist and influence the subject’s decision to participate. Prisoners may be swayed by privileges given for research participation, privileges they otherwise might not be able to obtain. Researchers often claim that reimbursement is meant to compensate subjects for the time and effort of participation, but such reimbursement may act as an intentional or unintentional incentive to gain participation. This subject remains an area of controversy.
Emergency situations arise in which a person requiring immediate life-saving treatment is unconscious or otherwise temporarily incapacitated and therefore cannot give informed consent. Family members should be consulted and asked to give “surrogate” consent, but sometimes they are not readily available. “Therapeutic privilege” is commonly invoked to justify treating a patient in the absence of explicit consent.
In such cases the recommendation is commonly made to document the circumstances and explain the situation to the patient as soon as possible.
Similar situations may arise when the patient cannot give informed consent because of a longer-term incapacitating disease or impairment or because the patient is a minor. In such cases surrogate consent may be requested from parent or legal guardian. They are presumed to be acting in the patient’s best interests and so the relevant information should be explained to them.
A more controversial situation occurs when the physician believes obtaining informed consent could cause harm to the patient. An emotionally unstable patient may experience debilitating anxiety, fear, nervousness, etc. upon hearing detailed explanations of procedures and risks and become depressed and even suicidal. Some ethicists argue that in situations in which this would preclude the patient from making a rational decision, the physician is morally permitted to withhold information.
Tom Regan, Empty Cages