An Audit of Preoperative Informed Consent in Surgical Patients at a Tertiary Care Hospital in Lahore, Pakistan

Cureus. 2023 Dec 7;15(12):e50122. doi: 10.7759/cureus.50122. eCollection 2023 Dec.

Abstract

Informed consent plays a crucial role in modern clinical practice, representing a fundamental aspect of patient rights and medical ethics. The purpose of informed consent is to ensure that patients fully comprehend the procedures to which they are providing consent and the recognition that the surgeon is not guilty of battery. Moreover, clinicians safeguard themselves against potential repercussions by documenting the risks adequately conveyed to patients before performing surgery. Therefore, the significance of informed consent cannot be overstated. This survey encompassed patients from various surgical departments who underwent surgery in April 2023 at a tertiary care hospital. For the survey participants above the age of 18 were selected undergoing either emergency or elective surgical procedures. The survey employed a structured questionnaire for interviews, assessing whether patients had given informed consent before surgery. The questionnaire also inquired whether patients received information about the diagnosis, proposed surgical procedure, associated risks, and any available alternative treatment options. Furthermore, patients were asked about the proposed anesthesia type and whether the associated risks were communicated to them before the surgery. A random selection of 50 patients was done for this study, and the process of block randomization was used with the help of a computer app to reduce bias and allow the representation of the various surgical subspecialties present in the tertiary care hospital. No evidence of consent being taken was present in two patients(4%) or the document on which the consent was signed was not present in the file. Only 48% of the patients acknowledged that they fully understood the provided information. While 60% of the patients were informed about the type of anesthesia proposed, a mere 8% were provided information regarding anesthesia risks. None of the patients in the emergency setting signed the consent form themselves, regardless of their capability to do so. Conversely, only 24% of the patients in the elective setting signed the consent form themselves. The study revealed that the quality of informed consent signing in this tertiary care hospital is below average. Healthcare professionals, including doctors and staff, need education regarding the importance of informed consent and the patient's right to comprehend any procedure or intervention to which they are subjected. A shift in the paradigm of decision-making about a patient's health needs to emphasize that the patient is the most critical entity in these decisions. The main aim of the study is twofold, primarily we want to analyze the existing method of taking informed consent by comparison with the guidelines and check whether the current practice of informed consent achieves its goal of involving the patients in their treatment. Secondarily, we want to discuss the effect that patient-doctor communication might have on the delivery of the above-mentioned information.

Keywords: anesthesia risks; clinical practice; decision-making paradigm; healthcare education; informed consent; medical ethics; patient rights; surgical patient survey; surgical procedures; tertiary care hospital.