What is bodily integrity?
A law that states that if you touch someone without their consent you commit battery.
What is professional competence?
A law that states if you obtain consent only because the patient does not know all the information about the side-effects and risks of the treatment, you commit negligence.
For consent to be valid, what must be true of the information given to the patient about the treatment?
1 - Must be sufficient (including side effects and alternatives).
2 - Must be communicated effectively.
3 - A balance must be struck; misjudged balance impacts on voluntariness.
Define voluntariness.
A choice being made of a person’s free will, as opposed to being made as the result of coercion.
Which 4 principles must be addressed in order for consent to be valid?
1 - Information.
2 - Competence.
3 - Voluntariness.
4 - Decision.
For consent to be valid, what must be true of the competence of the patient?
What is an advanced healthcare directive?
A legal document in which a person specifies which actions should be taken for their health if they lose their capacity to consent.
What is a healthcare proxy?
A document with which a patient appoints an agent to legally make healthcare decisions on behalf of the patient when the patient loses capacity to consent.
What is the consenting age for children in the UK?
What happens if a patient is under the consenting age?
- If lower, competence has to be assessed on an individual basis.
List 4 exceptions to consent.
1 - Emergency treatment to save life but incapacitated.
2 - Severe mental incapacity.
3 - Public health requirements (e.g. TB).
4 - Severely ill and living in unhygienic conditions.
Describe the 2015 Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board case.
Montgomery sought damages against Dr McLellan who was responsible for her care during pregnancy and labour as her son was born with cerebral palsy.
Give an example of when information must not necessarily be disclosed to a patient.
What is a material risk?
Which relatives of a child have automatic parental responsibility?
What is a voluntary order?
A legal document that means that parents retain responsibility over a child when they enter care.
What is a care order?
A legal document that means that responsibility over a child is shared between the parents and the child’s social care team.
What is an emergency protection order?
A legal document that means that responsibility over a child is taken over by the child’s social care team.
With <16 year old children that are also parents, who has responsibility over the baby?
The <16 year old is expected to be competent (if there are concerns then social services are already usually involved), so is usually responsible.
What is a residency order?
A court order settling the arrangements as to the person with whom a child is to live.
How many of the parents with parental responsibility are required to give consent?
Only one, except in non-therapeutic circumcision.
What must be done when there is disagreement between two parents with parental responsibility?
- With urgent care, one parent with parental responsibility is sufficient / best interests should be considered.
What is Gillick competence?
A child under the age of 16 has the legal competence to consent to medical examination or treatment if they have sufficient maturity and intelligence to understand the nature and implications of that treatment.
Summarise the Fraser guidelines concerning contraception in 5 bullet points.
What is the difference between Gillick and Fraser competency?
Gillick competency refers to all medical care involving children whereas Fraser competency refers to contraception.