Affiliation
Department of Surgery, Cork University Hospital, Cork, Ireland.Issue Date
2012-02-03T15:11:16ZMeSH
AdultAged
Cohort Studies
Culture
Cystoscopy/*psychology
Female
Humans
Informed Consent/legislation & jurisprudence/*psychology
Male
Middle Aged
Nurses/psychology
Organizational Policy
Patient Education as Topic
Patient Satisfaction
Personal Autonomy
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians/psychology
Prospective Studies
Questionnaires
Sigmoidoscopy/*psychology
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Surg Endosc. 2008 Dec;22(12):2698-704. Epub 2008 Apr 10.Journal
Surgical endoscopyDOI
10.1007/s00464-008-9874-3PubMed ID
18401652Abstract
BACKGROUND: "Consent is a process by which a patient is informed and becomes a participant in decisions regarding their medical management." It is argued, however, that providing a signature to a form adds little to the quality of this process. METHODS: Views regarding the consent ritual of nonselected patients undergoing endoscopy (cystoscopy or sigmoidoscopy) were prospectively studied together with those of the attending staff. Patient volunteers were randomly assigned to one of two groups and given verbal explanation before the procedure, either alone (group A) or with a request to sign a form in addition (group B). A standardized questionnaire regarding preferences then was applied. RESULTS: A total of 37 patients (22 men) were studied along with seven staff members. Most surveyed felt that signing a consent form helped to empower the patient (group A, 84%; group B, 83%; staff, 100%). Although the patients mainly believed that it functioned primarily to protect the hospital and doctor (group A, 89%; group B, 67%), only one patient (3% of total) felt that such a formality undermined the patient-doctor relationship. Most staff members favored signing a form (86%). The majority of patients either favored it (group A, 47%; group B, 78%) or expressed no strong preference (group A, 32%; group B, 11%). Interestingly, more women than men preferred signing (73 vs. 55%; p = 0.25), perhaps because more women believed that it functioned to preserve autonomy (93 vs. 77% of men). Age was no particular determinant of perspective. CONCLUSION: Although it may be viewed as primarily serving to protect the doctor and hospital, the formal process of signing written consent forms appeals to patients and staff.Language
engISSN
1432-2218 (Electronic)0930-2794 (Linking)
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1007/s00464-008-9874-3
Scopus Count
Collections
Related articles
- A comparison of the views of patients and medical staff in relation to the process of informed consent.
- Authors: Berry MG, Unwin J, Ross GL, Peacock E, Juma A
- Issue date: 2007 May
- Informed consent: do information pamphlets improve post-operative risk-recall in patients undergoing total thyroidectomy: prospective randomized control study.
- Authors: Alsaffar H, Wilson L, Kamdar DP, Sultanov F, Enepekides D, Higgins KM
- Issue date: 2016 Feb 13
- [Informed consent for gastrointestinal endoscopy. A patient-opinion survey].
- Authors: Denis B, Bottlaender J, Goineau J, Peter A, Weiss AM
- Issue date: 2002 Aug-Sep
- The quality of informed consent in Croatia-a cross-sectional study and instrument development.
- Authors: Vučemilo L, Milošević M, Dodig D, Grabušić B, Đapić B, Borovečki A
- Issue date: 2016 Mar
- Does written informed consent adequately inform surgical patients? A cross sectional study.
- Authors: Agozzino E, Borrelli S, Cancellieri M, Carfora FM, Di Lorenzo T, Attena F
- Issue date: 2019 Jan 7