UMEM Educational Pearls

Title: Can my patient with dementia refuse treatment?

Category: Neurology

Keywords: capacity, dementia, altered mental status, medicolegal, ethics (PubMed Search)

Posted: 6/27/2018 by Danya Khoujah, MBBS
Click here to contact Danya Khoujah, MBBS

Medical decision-making capacity refers to the patient’s ability to make informed decisions regarding their care, and emergency physicians are frequently required to assess whether a patient possess this capacity. Patients with acute or chronic neurological diseases (such as dementia) may lack this capacity, and this should be identified, especially in life-threatening situations. The patient must have the ability to:

  • communicate a consistent choice

  • understand (and express) the risks, benefits, alternatives and consequences

  • appreciate how the information applies to the particular situation

  • reason through the choices to make a decision

There are numerous tools that may help with this assessment, but none has been validated in the ED. Be careful of determining that the patient lacks capacity just because of the diagnosis they carry. 

 

BONUS PEARLS:

 

 

  • Capacity is a fluid concept; a patient may have the capacity to make simple decisions but not more complex ones. Capacity may also change over time

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  • Psychiatry consultation to determine capacity is not obligatory but may be utilized for a second opinion.  

References

Rodgers JJ, Kass JS. Assessment of Medical Decision-making Capacity in Patients With Dementia.  Continuum 2018;24(3):920925.