Decision-Making Capacity - Got Capacity?
-
A clinical determination, not a legal one (vs. competence). Assessed for a specific medical decision.
-
Capacity is task-specific and can fluctuate (e.g., due to delirium).
-
📌 CURA mnemonic for components:
- Communicates a choice.
- Understands relevant information.
- Reasons about treatment options.
- Appreciates the situation and its consequences.
⭐ A patient's disagreement with a physician's recommendation does not automatically mean they lack decision-making capacity.
Surrogate Hierarchy - Who's on Deck?
When a patient lacks decision-making capacity, the authority to make medical decisions transfers to a surrogate. The hierarchy for selecting this surrogate is generally established by state law.
- Primary Standard: The surrogate must use Substituted Judgment, making the decision the patient would have wanted.
- Secondary Standard: If the patient's wishes are unknown, the surrogate must act in the patient's Best Interests.
⭐ A designated healthcare proxy or agent with Medical Power of Attorney (MPOA) legally supersedes all family members, including the spouse. This is a critical and frequently tested point.
Decision Standards - Playing Detective
Surrogates must follow a clear hierarchy to make decisions that honor the incapacitated patient. The primary goal is to replicate the decision the patient would have made.
- Substituted Judgment: The surrogate makes the decision the patient would have made based on their known values and preferences (e.g., prior conversations, living will).
- Best Interests Standard: When the patient's wishes are completely unknown, the surrogate must choose the action that serves the patient's welfare, weighing treatment benefits against burdens.
⭐ The Substituted Judgment standard is ethically and legally the preferred method as it most closely respects the principle of patient autonomy.
📌 Mnemonic: Substituted Before Interests (SBI) - always try to use the patient's own voice first.
Special Scenarios - Ethical Exceptions
- Emergencies: Implied consent is assumed if a delay in treatment would cause serious harm to an incapacitated patient. No surrogate? Proceed with life-saving care.
- Minors: Parental/guardian consent is required.
- Exceptions: Emancipated minors, or for specific sensitive issues (e.g., contraception, STIs, substance abuse, pregnancy).
- Therapeutic Privilege: Rare exception. Provider may withhold information if direct disclosure would cause severe, immediate, and demonstrable harm.
- Patient Waiver: A competent patient may voluntarily waive their right to be informed.
⭐ In an emergency, the "implied consent" principle allows physicians to act without explicit consent to prevent death or severe disability. This is a frequently tested concept.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- For an incapacitated patient, a surrogate decision-maker is appointed, following a specific hierarchy: spouse, adult children, parents, then siblings.
- The primary standard is substituted judgment-making the choice the patient would have made based on their known values.
- If the patient's wishes are unknown, the best interests standard is applied.
- An advance directive (e.g., living will, healthcare proxy) legally supersedes the surrogate's authority.
- Surrogates cannot compel physicians to provide medically futile treatments.
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app