Cargando…

Are We Meeting the Current Standards of Consent for Anesthesia? An International Survey of Clinical Practice

BACKGROUND: International application of existing guidelines and recommendations on anesthesia-specific informed consent is limited by differences in healthcare and legal systems. Understanding national and regional variations is necessary to determine future guidelines. MATERIAL/METHODS: Anonymous...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Jovaisa, Tomas, Norkiene, Ieva, Karjagin, Juri, Golubovska, Iveta, Gambickas, Lukas, Kalinauskaite, Migle, Kauzonas, Evaldas, Wijayatilake, Djuleep
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7545782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33012779
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.925905
_version_ 1783592100464427008
author Jovaisa, Tomas
Norkiene, Ieva
Karjagin, Juri
Golubovska, Iveta
Gambickas, Lukas
Kalinauskaite, Migle
Kauzonas, Evaldas
Wijayatilake, Djuleep
author_facet Jovaisa, Tomas
Norkiene, Ieva
Karjagin, Juri
Golubovska, Iveta
Gambickas, Lukas
Kalinauskaite, Migle
Kauzonas, Evaldas
Wijayatilake, Djuleep
author_sort Jovaisa, Tomas
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: International application of existing guidelines and recommendations on anesthesia-specific informed consent is limited by differences in healthcare and legal systems. Understanding national and regional variations is necessary to determine future guidelines. MATERIAL/METHODS: Anonymous paper surveys on their practices regarding anesthesia-specific patient informed consent were sent to anesthesiologists in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. RESULTS: A total of 233 responses were received, representing 36%, 26%, and 24% of the practicing anesthesiologists in Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, respectively. Although 85% of responders in Lithuania reported using separate forms to secure patient informed consent for anesthesia, 54.5% of responders in Estonia and 50% in Latvia reported using joint forms to secure patient informed consent for surgery and anesthesia. Incident rates were understated by 14.2% of responders and overstated by 66.4% (P<0.001), with the latter frequently quoting incident rates that are several to tens of times higher than those published internationally. Physicians obtaining consent in the outpatient setting were more satisfied with the process than those obtaining consent on the day of surgery, with 62.5% and 42.6%, respectively, agreeing that the informed consent forms provided a satisfactory description of complications (P=0.03). Patients were significantly less likely to read consent information when signing forms on the day of surgery than at earlier times (8.5% vs. 67.5%, P<0.001). Only 46.2% of respondents felt legally protected by the current consent process. CONCLUSIONS: Anesthesia-specific informed patient consent practices differ significantly in the 3 Baltic states, with these practices often falling short of legal requirements. Efforts should be made to improving information accuracy, patient autonomy, and compliance with existing legal standards.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7545782
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher International Scientific Literature, Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-75457822021-03-03 Are We Meeting the Current Standards of Consent for Anesthesia? An International Survey of Clinical Practice Jovaisa, Tomas Norkiene, Ieva Karjagin, Juri Golubovska, Iveta Gambickas, Lukas Kalinauskaite, Migle Kauzonas, Evaldas Wijayatilake, Djuleep Med Sci Monit Clinical Research BACKGROUND: International application of existing guidelines and recommendations on anesthesia-specific informed consent is limited by differences in healthcare and legal systems. Understanding national and regional variations is necessary to determine future guidelines. MATERIAL/METHODS: Anonymous paper surveys on their practices regarding anesthesia-specific patient informed consent were sent to anesthesiologists in Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania. RESULTS: A total of 233 responses were received, representing 36%, 26%, and 24% of the practicing anesthesiologists in Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, respectively. Although 85% of responders in Lithuania reported using separate forms to secure patient informed consent for anesthesia, 54.5% of responders in Estonia and 50% in Latvia reported using joint forms to secure patient informed consent for surgery and anesthesia. Incident rates were understated by 14.2% of responders and overstated by 66.4% (P<0.001), with the latter frequently quoting incident rates that are several to tens of times higher than those published internationally. Physicians obtaining consent in the outpatient setting were more satisfied with the process than those obtaining consent on the day of surgery, with 62.5% and 42.6%, respectively, agreeing that the informed consent forms provided a satisfactory description of complications (P=0.03). Patients were significantly less likely to read consent information when signing forms on the day of surgery than at earlier times (8.5% vs. 67.5%, P<0.001). Only 46.2% of respondents felt legally protected by the current consent process. CONCLUSIONS: Anesthesia-specific informed patient consent practices differ significantly in the 3 Baltic states, with these practices often falling short of legal requirements. Efforts should be made to improving information accuracy, patient autonomy, and compliance with existing legal standards. International Scientific Literature, Inc. 2020-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7545782/ /pubmed/33012779 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.925905 Text en © Med Sci Monit, 2020 This work is licensed under Creative Common Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) )
spellingShingle Clinical Research
Jovaisa, Tomas
Norkiene, Ieva
Karjagin, Juri
Golubovska, Iveta
Gambickas, Lukas
Kalinauskaite, Migle
Kauzonas, Evaldas
Wijayatilake, Djuleep
Are We Meeting the Current Standards of Consent for Anesthesia? An International Survey of Clinical Practice
title Are We Meeting the Current Standards of Consent for Anesthesia? An International Survey of Clinical Practice
title_full Are We Meeting the Current Standards of Consent for Anesthesia? An International Survey of Clinical Practice
title_fullStr Are We Meeting the Current Standards of Consent for Anesthesia? An International Survey of Clinical Practice
title_full_unstemmed Are We Meeting the Current Standards of Consent for Anesthesia? An International Survey of Clinical Practice
title_short Are We Meeting the Current Standards of Consent for Anesthesia? An International Survey of Clinical Practice
title_sort are we meeting the current standards of consent for anesthesia? an international survey of clinical practice
topic Clinical Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7545782/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33012779
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/MSM.925905
work_keys_str_mv AT jovaisatomas arewemeetingthecurrentstandardsofconsentforanesthesiaaninternationalsurveyofclinicalpractice
AT norkieneieva arewemeetingthecurrentstandardsofconsentforanesthesiaaninternationalsurveyofclinicalpractice
AT karjaginjuri arewemeetingthecurrentstandardsofconsentforanesthesiaaninternationalsurveyofclinicalpractice
AT golubovskaiveta arewemeetingthecurrentstandardsofconsentforanesthesiaaninternationalsurveyofclinicalpractice
AT gambickaslukas arewemeetingthecurrentstandardsofconsentforanesthesiaaninternationalsurveyofclinicalpractice
AT kalinauskaitemigle arewemeetingthecurrentstandardsofconsentforanesthesiaaninternationalsurveyofclinicalpractice
AT kauzonasevaldas arewemeetingthecurrentstandardsofconsentforanesthesiaaninternationalsurveyofclinicalpractice
AT wijayatilakedjuleep arewemeetingthecurrentstandardsofconsentforanesthesiaaninternationalsurveyofclinicalpractice