Literature DB >> 28985348

Elbow Room for Best Practice? Montgomery, Patients' values, and Balanced Decision-Making in Person-Centred Clinical Care.

Jonathan Herring1, Kmw Fulford2, Michael Dunn3, Ashoki Handa2,4.   

Abstract

The UK Supreme Court Montgomery judgment marks a decisive shift in the legal test of duty of care in the context of consent to treatment, from the perspective of the clinician (as represented by Bolam rules) to that of the patient. A majority of commentators on Montgomery have focused on the implications of the judgment for disclosure of risk. In this article, we set risk disclosure in context with three further elements of the judgment: benefits, options, and dialogue. These elements, we argue, taken together with risk disclosure, reflect the origins of the Montgomery ruling in a model of consent based on autonomy of patient choice through shared decision-making with their doctor. This model reflects recent developments in both law and medicine and is widely regarded (by the General Medical Council and others) as representing best practice in contemporary person-centred medicine. So understood, we suggest, the shift marked by Montgomery in the basis of duty of care is a shift in underpinning values: it is a shift from the clinician's interpretation about what would be best for patients to the values of (to what is significant or matters from the perspective of) the particular patient concerned in the decision in question. But the values of the particular patient do not thereby become paramount. The Montgomery test of duty of care requires the values of the particular patient to be balanced alongside the values of a reasonable person in the patient's position. We illustrate some of the practical challenges arising from the balance of considerations required by Montgomery with examples from surgical care. These examples show the extent to which Montgomery, in mirroring the realities of clinical decision-making, provides elbowroom for best practice in person-centred clinical care.
© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press; all rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Autonomy; Birth; Consent; Negligence; Patients; Values

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28985348     DOI: 10.1093/medlaw/fwx029

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Law Rev        ISSN: 0967-0742            Impact factor:   1.267


  6 in total

1.  Conceptual work to advance psychiatric and neuroscientific sophistication: a report by the WPA Section on Philosophy and Humanities in Psychiatry.

Authors:  Werdie van Staden; Kenneth W M Fulford; Michael Wong
Journal:  World Psychiatry       Date:  2020-02       Impact factor: 49.548

2.  Recognizing the Dying Patient, When Less Could be More: A Diagnostic Framework for Shared Decision-Making at the End of Life.

Authors:  Dilraj Kalsi; Joel Ward; Regent Lee; Bee Wee; Kenneth Wm Fulford; Ashok Handa
Journal:  J Patient Exp       Date:  2019-09-12

3.  Oxford Video Informed Consent Tool (OxVIC): a pilot study of informed video consent in spinal surgery and preoperative patient satisfaction.

Authors:  Gerard Mawhinney; Chrishan Thakar; Victoria Williamson; Dominique A Rothenfluh; Jeremy Reynolds
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2019-07-24       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  'Hobson's choice': a qualitative study of consent in acute surgery.

Authors:  Anthony Howard; Jonathan Webster; Naomi Quinton; Peter V Giannoudis
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2020-10-08       Impact factor: 2.692

5.  Consent in organ transplantation: putting legal obligations and guidelines into practice.

Authors:  Farrah Raza; James Neuberger
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2022-07-05       Impact factor: 2.834

Review 6.  Legal and evidenced-based definitions of standard of care: Implications for code of ethics of professional medical societies.

Authors:  Nancy E Epstein
Journal:  Surg Neurol Int       Date:  2018-12-18
  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.