Objectives
Ater reading this chapter, HEC members should be able to:
Define informed consent and shared decision-making.
Distinguish between ethical and legal requirements for informed consent.
Apply the concept of shared decision-making to a variety of cases involving
autonomy, professional authority, and disclosure.
Case 1
A woman is admitted to a teaching hospital in active labor. After some hours in unproductive
labor, her physician decides that oxytocin is needed to aid the labor and delivery. The physician
tells the charge nurse that someone must “consent” the patient before the oxytocin is administered.
The nurse approaches the patient with a consent form and a dose of oxytocin. The
patient hesitates to sign, saying she does not wish to waive her right to sue the doctors and
hospital in case something is done incorrectly and the baby or mother is harmed. The nurse
tells the patient that, if she does not sign the consent form, she cannot deliver her baby in the
hospital.
Case 2
After a teenager suggests suicide may be his best option, his parents take him to amental health
hospital and, after an intake interview, the teen is admitted for in-patient treatment. The next
day, the parents are called and told their son has met the doctor and been diagnosed with bipolar
disorder. The parents go to the hospital in the evening and, upon arrival, are presented with
a consent form. The nurse says, “If you want your son treated, sign this.” The treatment plan on
the informed consent form consists of one word, “Prozac,” which is not labeled for use as a sole
treatment for bipolar disorder. When the parents ask for an explanation of the treatment and
diagnosis, they are told that only the doctor can give a full explanation. When the parents ask
to speak to the doctor, they are told he is not available. Instead, the parents are directed to a
meeting with a caseworker with no direct knowledge of the patient who describes the diagnostic
criteria for bipolar disorder. The information presented is somewhat arcane to parents fearing for their son’s well-being, but it is not incomprehensible. When the parents ask which
of the criteria their son meets, they cannot get an answer, of course, because the caseworker
is unfamiliar with his symptoms and history. After repeated requests for more information and
repeated denials, the parents withdraw their son from the facility against medical advice and
are told they are risking their son’s life.