Abstract

BackgroundThere is little dispute that the ideal moral standard for surgical informed consent calls for surgeons to carry out a disclosure dialogue with patients before they sign the informed consent form. This narrative study is the first to link patient experiences regarding the disclosure dialogue with patient-surgeon trust, central to effective recuperation and higher adherence.MethodsInformants were 12 Israelis (6 men and 6 women), aged 29–81, who underwent life-saving surgeries. A snowball sampling was used to locate participants in their initial recovery process upon discharge.ResultsOur empirical evidence indicates an infringement of patients’ right to receive an adequate disclosure dialogue that respects their autonomy. More than half of the participants signed the informed consent form with no disclosure dialogue, and thus felt anxious, deceived and lost their trust in surgeons. Surgeons nullified the meaning of informed consent rather than promoted participants’ moral agency and dignity.DiscussionSimilarity among jarring experiences of participants led us to contend that the conduct of nullifying surgical informed consent does not stem solely from constraints of time and resources, but may reflect an underlying paradox preserving this conduct and leading to objectification of patients and persisting in paternalism. We propose a multi-phase data-driven model for informed consent that attends to patients needs and facilitates patient trust in surgeons.ConclusionsPatient experiences attest to the infringement of a patient’s right to respect for autonomy. In order to meet the prima facie right of respect for autonomy, moral agency and dignity, physicians ought to respect patient’s needs. It is now time to renew efforts to avoid negligent disclosure and implement a patient-centered model of informed consent.

Highlights

  • There is little dispute that the ideal moral standard for surgical informed consent calls for surgeons to carry out a disclosure dialogue with patients before they sign the informed consent form

  • The autonomy to authorize a certain procedure implies that the term ‘informed consent’ can be aptly termed ‘informed choice’ and is the bedrock principle of medical ethics [1,2,3,4]

  • All participants related to the communication with the surgeon about the surgery, or lack thereof in their narratives on the hospitalization experience

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Summary

Introduction

There is little dispute that the ideal moral standard for surgical informed consent calls for surgeons to carry out a disclosure dialogue with patients before they sign the informed consent form. This narrative study is the first to link patient experiences regarding the disclosure dialogue with patient-surgeon trust, central to effective recuperation and higher adherence. Surgeons adhere to three criteria of adequate informed consent (IC ); namely: Capacity, autonomy, and disclosure. ‘Capacity’ relates to the patient’s mental ability to make decisions. ‘Disclosure’ relates to the information required to enable the patient to make a decision regarding the procedure [5]. The idea of IC has been understood in terms of freedom (from interference and paternalism) and patient autonomy [6]

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