知情同意
代表
对话
家庭医学
心理学
职业责任
医学
医学教育
替代医学
政治学
计算机科学
沟通
病理
程序设计语言
法学
作者
Erin M. White,Andrew C. Esposito,Peter S. Yoo
出处
期刊:Academic Medicine
[Lippincott Williams & Wilkins]
日期:2023-12-19
卷期号:99 (8): 897-903
被引量:1
标识
DOI:10.1097/acm.0000000000005587
摘要
Abstract Purpose Because residents are frequently delegated the task of obtaining consent early in their training, the American Association of Medical Colleges describes “obtaining informed consent” as a core entrustable professional activity (EPA) for medical school graduates. However, prior studies demonstrated that residents frequently perform this task without receiving formal instruction or assessment of competency. This study sought to understand how attending physicians decide to delegate obtaining informed consent for surgical procedures to trainees. Method The authors conducted a survey of attending surgeons at a university-based health care system of 6 affiliated teaching hospitals (October–December 2020) to collect data about current entrustment practices and attendings’ knowledge, experience, and attitudes surrounding the informed consent process. Summary statistics and bivariate analyses were applied. Results Eighty-five attending surgeons participated (response rate, 49.4%) from diverse specialties, practice types, and years in practice. Fifty-eight of 85 (68.2%) stated they “never” granted responsibility for the consent conversation to a trainee, and 74/81 (91.4%) reported they typically repeated their own consent conversation whenever a trainee already obtained consent. The most common reasons they retained responsibility for consent were ethical duty (69/82, 84.1%) and the patient relationship (65/82, 79.3%), while less than half (40/82, 48.8%) described concerns about trainee competency. Reflecting on hypothetical clinical scenarios, increased resident competency did not correspond with increased entrustment ( P = .27–.62). Nearly all respondents (83/85, 97.7%) believed residents should receive formal training; however, only 41/85 (48.2%) felt additional training and assessment of residents might change their current entrustment practices. Conclusions Attendings view informed consent as an ethical and professional obligation that typically cannot be entrusted to trainees. This practice is discordant with previous literature studying residents’ perspectives. Furthermore, resident competency does not play a predominant role in this decision, calling into question whether informed consent can be considered an EPA.
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