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Legal and ethical issues in dementia care

Legal and ethical issues in dementia care

Legal and ethical issues in dementia care

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Decisional Capacity - Can They Choose?

  • Decisional Capacity: A clinical determination of a patient's ability to make a specific medical decision. It is task-specific and can fluctuate, unlike competency, which is a legal state.
  • Requires the ability to:
    • Communicate a choice
    • Understand relevant information
    • Appreciate the situation and its consequences
    • Reason about treatment options

⭐ Capacity is not global. A patient may have capacity for one decision (e.g., naming a proxy) but not another (e.g., complex surgery). It must be assessed for the specific decision at hand.

Advance Directives - Planning Ahead

  • Legal instruments allowing individuals to state future medical care preferences before losing decision-making capacity.
  • Living Will:
    • Outlines desired or rejected treatments (e.g., mechanical ventilation, tube feeding).
    • Less flexible; cannot cover all future scenarios.
  • Durable Power of Attorney for Healthcare (DPOAHC):
    • Appoints a healthcare proxy/agent to make decisions.
    • More flexible and broadly recommended.
  • Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST):
    • Medical orders for current treatment for seriously ill patients.
    • Specifies CPR, medical interventions, and feeding.

⭐ A DPOAHC is often preferred over a living will because it provides a designated person (agent) who can interpret the patient's wishes in unforeseen clinical situations, offering greater flexibility.

Safety & Reporting - Driving Dilemmas

  • Core Conflict: Balancing patient autonomy vs. the physician's ethical duty to protect the public. Public safety often takes precedence.
  • Clinical Assessment: Crucial for determining risk.
    • In-office: MMSE, MoCA, Clock-Drawing Test, Trail Making Test Part B.
    • History from family/caregivers is vital.
    • Gold Standard: Formal on-road driving evaluation.
  • Management Protocol:
    • Counsel patient and family on safety risks.
    • Recommend driving cessation if impairment is found.
    • Document all conversations and recommendations meticulously.

⭐ Most states legally protect physicians from liability when they report a potentially unsafe driver to the DMV in good faith. Reporting laws (mandatory vs. permissive) vary by state.

Vulnerability Shield - Elder Abuse

  • Definition: Any intentional act or failure to act by a caregiver or another person in a relationship involving an expectation of trust that causes or creates a risk of harm to an older adult.
  • Risk Factors in Dementia:
    • Patient: Cognitive impairment, dependency, behavioral disturbances.
    • Caregiver: Stress, burnout, substance abuse, financial dependency on the elder.
    • Social: Isolation, lack of support.
  • Clinical Indicators:
    • Unexplained injuries (e.g., bruises in unusual patterns, spiral fractures).
    • Poor hygiene, pressure ulcers, malnutrition, dehydration.
    • Sudden changes in finances or will.
    • Fearful or withdrawn behavior.

Mandatory Reporting: Physicians are mandated reporters. If elder abuse is suspected, a report must be made to the local Adult Protective Services (APS) agency. This is a legal duty that overrides patient confidentiality; consent is not required.

Infographic: Types of Elder Abuse and Symptoms

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Decision-making capacity is task-specific and can fluctuate; it is not an all-or-nothing judgment.
  • Advance directives (e.g., living will, durable power of attorney) are crucial for upholding patient autonomy.
  • When a patient lacks capacity, decisions fall to a designated surrogate or next of kin.
  • Physicians have an ethical duty to address driving safety, which may require reporting to the DMV.
  • Maintain a high suspicion for elder abuse (financial, physical, neglect) in this vulnerable population.

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