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Informed consent in clinical practice: Old problems, new challenges

Isaac KS Ng

2024The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh30 citationsDOI

Abstract

Informed consent is a fundamental tenet of patient-centred clinical practice as it upholds the ethical principle of patient autonomy and promotes shared decision-making. In the medicolegal realm, failure to meet the accepted standards of consent can be considered as medical negligence which has both legal and professional implications. In general, valid consent requires three core components: (1) the presence of mental capacity - characterised by the patient's ability to comprehend, retain information, weigh options and communicate the decision, (2) adequate information disclosure - based on the 'reasonable physician' or 'reasonable patient' standards and (3) voluntariness in decision-making. Nonetheless, in real-world clinical settings, informed consent is not always optimally achieved, due to various patient, contextual and systemic factors. In this article, I herein discuss three major challenges to informed consent in clinical practice: (1) patient literacy and sociocultural factors, (2) psychiatric illnesses and elderly patients with cognitive impairment and (3) artificial intelligence in clinical care, and sought to offer practical mitigating strategies to address these barriers.

Topics & Concepts

VoluntarinessInformed consentAutonomyPsychologyLegal guardianRealmMedicineAlternative medicinePolitical scienceLawPathologyPatient Dignity and PrivacyPatient-Provider Communication in HealthcareHealthcare Decision-Making and Restraints
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