Clarke Keara, OʼLoughlin Padhraig, Cashman James
From the Department of Trauma and Orthopaedic Surgery, Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, Dublin, Ireland.
J Patient Saf. 2018 Jun;14(2):e25-e28. doi: 10.1097/PTS.0000000000000230.
Informed consent embodies the ethical principle of autonomy of the surgical patient. Effective communication is essential to this decision-making process. Variability in consent can lead to confusion among patients and can expose the surgeon to risk in an increasingly litigious environment.
This study aimed to evaluate the use of a standardized consenting process and assess the pattern of information recall following provision of patient information sheets.
One hundred orthopedic clinic patients were randomly selected to participate in this prospective audit. Mean age was 41 years. Each participant was consented to undergo wrist manipulation under anaesthesia and K-wiring using a standardized British Orthopaedic Association consent form. A 22-item questionnaire was completed based on the information provided. Half of the cohort received additional printed take-home material. Each questionnaire was repeated 1 day later to determine which aspects of consent were best retained.
Baseline scores were low on initial questioning for each section. There was a significant decrease in information retained over 24-hour interval (mean, 8.94 versus 7.98, P ≤ 0.000). Where standardized forms were provided, individual baseline scores rose significantly 24 hours after initial questioning. In particular, arthritis, neurovascular injury, and infection were more likely to be remembered with provision of written information (P = 0.01). Significantly lower scores were seen in those who had not received written information (mean, 9.542 versus 6.449; P ≤ 0.00).
Consent remains challenging even with a standardized process. Information retention improves significantly with the use of information sheets. We advocate the use of standard consent and provision of patient information sheets for commonly performed procedures.
知情同意体现了手术患者自主的伦理原则。有效的沟通对于这一决策过程至关重要。同意过程中的差异可能导致患者困惑,并使外科医生在诉讼日益增多的环境中面临风险。
本研究旨在评估标准化同意过程的使用情况,并评估提供患者信息表后信息回忆的模式。
随机选择100名骨科门诊患者参与这项前瞻性审计。平均年龄为41岁。使用标准化的英国骨科协会同意书,让每位参与者同意在麻醉下进行手腕手法复位及克氏针内固定。根据提供的信息完成一份包含22个条目的问卷。一半的队列参与者收到了额外的可带回家的印刷材料。1天后重复进行每份问卷,以确定同意的哪些方面记忆效果最佳。
每个部分在初始询问时的基线分数都很低。在24小时间隔内,保留的信息显著减少(平均值,8.94对7.98,P≤0.000)。在提供标准化表格的情况下,初始询问24小时后个体基线分数显著上升。特别是,提供书面信息后,关节炎、神经血管损伤和感染更有可能被记住(P = 0.01)。未收到书面信息的参与者得分显著更低(平均值,9.542对6.449;P≤0.00)。
即使采用标准化流程,同意过程仍然具有挑战性。使用信息表可显著提高信息保留率。我们提倡对常见手术使用标准同意书并提供患者信息表。