| Literature DB >> 3184147 |
D L Cohen1, L B McCullough, R W Kessel, A Y Apostolides, K J Heiderich, E R Alden.
Abstract
The authors surveyed a national random sample of medical students (10 percent of the graduating class of 1985) to identify the ways in which the students obtained informed consent from their patients and to learn the students' views of certain issues concerning informed consent. The results showed that the students introduced themselves to patients using methods that the authors grouped by levels of forthrightness. Those students who introduced themselves as medical students differed in their views on selected informed consent issues from students who introduced themselves as physicians. In general, all the students were less forthright about their status when given the opportunity to perform invasive procedures. Student gender, type of patient, and type of hospital were statistically associated with the students' behavior, according to bivariate analysis. After multivariate regression analysis, however, only the actions of the students' role models (residents and attending physicians) remained significantly associated with the students' behavior. The authors conclude that because some aspects of student behavior are at odds with the requirements of informed consent, medical educators must scrutinize the ethical dimensions of the policies they establish.Entities:
Keywords: Empirical Approach; Professional Patient Relationship
Mesh:
Year: 1988 PMID: 3184147 DOI: 10.1097/00001888-198811000-00001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Educ ISSN: 0022-2577