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Emergency exceptions to informed consent

Emergency exceptions to informed consent

Emergency exceptions to informed consent

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  • Process: A dialogue between a clinician and a patient ensuring the patient has sufficient information to make a voluntary decision about their care.
  • Core Components:
    • Disclosure: Discussion of the diagnosis, proposed treatment, risks/benefits, and alternatives (including no treatment).
    • Capacity: Patient must have decision-making capacity (understand, appreciate, reason, and communicate a choice).
    • Voluntariness: Decision must be free from coercion or manipulation.
  • Goal: To respect patient autonomy.

⭐ The treating physician is responsible for determining if a patient has decision-making capacity. This is a clinical judgment, not a legal one.

Emergency Exception - When Seconds Count

  • Applies when immediate treatment is required to prevent serious harm or death.
  • Patient must be incapacitated and unable to provide consent.
  • No surrogate decision-maker or advance directive (e.g., living will) is immediately available.
  • The "reasonable person" standard applies: what would a prudent person in a similar situation want?

⭐ The legal basis is implied consent. The provider presumes the patient would consent to life-saving measures. Meticulous documentation of the circumstances is a legal and ethical necessity to justify bypassing consent.

Special Cases - Navigating Nuances

  • Minors: Implied consent applies in emergencies without parental permission.
    • Confidential consent is allowed for specific non-emergencies (e.g., STIs, contraception, pregnancy, substance abuse).
    • Emancipated minors (married, military, self-supporting) provide their own consent.
  • Advance Directives: Valid, specific directives (e.g., DNR/DNI) must be honored.
    • If a directive is ambiguous or its applicability is unclear, the priority shifts to preserving life.
  • Incapacitated Patients: Adults lacking capacity (e.g., intoxication, delirium) are treated under implied consent to prevent serious harm if no directive or surrogate is available.

⭐ When an incapacitated patient lacks an advance directive, consent is sought from a surrogate, typically following a legal hierarchy: spouse → adult children → parents → siblings.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Applies when a patient lacks decision-making capacity and faces a life-threatening emergency.
  • Treatment is necessary to prevent serious harm or death, and waiting for consent is not feasible.
  • This principle is known as implied consent, based on what a reasonable person would want.
  • Does not apply if the patient has a known objection to the treatment (e.g., an advance directive).
  • The exception is invalid if a surrogate decision-maker is immediately available.

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