Quality of informed consent as experienced by patients awaiting surgical intervention in a tertiay care setting in Sri Lanka

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Date

2018

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Sri Lanka Medical Association

Abstract

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Informed consent is a basic ethical principle. The existing guidelines may not be fully operational in practice. The objective of this study was to identify the common lapses in obtaining informed context METHODS: A cross-sectional descriptive study was conducted in surgical wards of North-Colombo Teaching Hospital. A questionnaire was developed by observing 11 consent-taking encounters. 100 in-ward patients awaiting surgical interventions completed the questionnaire. RESULTS: We observed that the information regarding surgery is provided by different personnel along the process. The gap between information provision and consent taking appeared inadequate for patients to take a well thought-out decision. In most instances, consenting was given by signing/thumb-printing a statement prescribed by the intern house officer. Disturbances to the process of doctor-patient conversation were also observed and privacy was a concern as the setting for doctor-patient conversation was not in an acceptably private space. According to patients, information provision (48% in the clinic; 43% of the time by senior doctors) and expressing (100% in the ward; 86% of the time by most junior doctors and 10% by nurses) have happened as two disjointed processes. Common lapses identified by patients were: alternative treatment options were not explained (85%); a tendency not to discuss risks (50%); confinement to verbal explanation (87%); and not requesting patients to paraphrase to check their understanding (90.9%).CONCLUSION: There were lapses in consent-taking procedure which were largely attributable to poor patient centeredness and respect for patients' autonomy among doctors, and the power gap between patients and doctors.

Description

Oral presentation Abstract (OP28), 131st Annual Scientific Sessions, Sri Lanka Medical Association, 26th-29th July 2018 Colombo, Sri Lanka

Keywords

Surgical intervention

Citation

Proceedings of the Sri Lanka Medical Association, Anniversary Academic Sessions. 2018; 63(sup 1): 21

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