Family roles in informed consent from the perspective of young Chinese doctors: a questionnaire study

被引:6
|
作者
Xu, Hanhui [1 ]
Yuan, Mengci [1 ]
机构
[1] Nankai Univ, Sch Med, Tianjin 300071, Peoples R China
关键词
Informed consent; Family roles; Physician-patient relationship; Chinese young doctors; DECISION-MAKING; MEDICAL-TREATMENT; DISCLOSURE; MEMBERS; PREFERENCES; PHYSICIANS; DIAGNOSIS; AUTONOMY;
D O I
10.1186/s12910-023-00999-6
中图分类号
B82 [伦理学(道德学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background Based on the principle of informed consent, doctors are required to fully inform patients and respect their medical decisions. In China, however, family members usually play a special role in the patient's informed consent, which creates a unique "doctor-family-patient" model of the physician-patient relationship. Our study targets young doctors to investigate the ethical dilemmas they may encounter in such a model, as well as their attitudes to the family roles in informed consent. Methods A questionnaire was developed including general demographic characteristics, the fulfillment of the obligation to fully inform, who will be informed, and the ethical dilemmas in decision-making. We recruited a total of 421 doctors to complete this questionnaire, of which 368 met the age requirements for this study. Cross tabulation and Pearson's chi-squared test were used to analyze the differences between types of patients for categorical variables, and a p-value < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Results Our data shows that only 20 doctors (5.40%) stated "informing the patient alone is sufficient" when it comes to informing patients of their serious conditions. The rest of the participants would ensure that the family was informed. When facing elderly patients with decision-making capacity, the data was statistically different (3.8%; P < 0.001) The primary reason for ensuring that family members be informed differs among the participants. In addition, when family members asked doctors to conceal the patient's medical condition for the best interests of patients, 270 doctors (73.4%) would agree and cooperate with the family. A similar proportion (79.6%) would do so when it comes to elderly patients. Conclusions (1) Chinese doctors pay extra attention to informing the patient's family, which may not be in the patient's best interests. (2) Chinese doctors treat adult (but not elderly) patients and elderly patients differently when it comes to informing family members. (3) When family members request that doctors withhold information from patients "in the best interest of the patient," the majority choose to comply with the request, although this may cause them distress.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Family roles in informed consent from the perspective of young Chinese doctors: a questionnaire study
    Hanhui Xu
    Mengci Yuan
    BMC Medical Ethics, 25
  • [2] The red packet phenomenon from the perspective of young Chinese doctors: a questionnaire study
    Hanhui Xu
    Mengci Yuan
    BMC Medical Ethics, 23
  • [3] The red packet phenomenon from the perspective of young Chinese doctors: a questionnaire study
    Xu, Hanhui
    Yuan, Mengci
    BMC MEDICAL ETHICS, 2022, 23 (01)
  • [4] The ethics of research informed consent from the Kyrgyz perspective: A qualitative study
    Kudaibergenova, Tamara
    DEVELOPING WORLD BIOETHICS, 2024,
  • [5] Informed consent challenges and strategies: A qualitative study of the orthodontists' perspective
    Moreira, Narjara Conduru Fernandes
    Keenan, Louanne
    Cummings, Greta
    Flores-Mir, Carlos
    ORTHODONTICS & CRANIOFACIAL RESEARCH, 2022, 25 (02) : 251 - 259
  • [6] Intrapartum ultrasound and mother acceptance: A study with informed consent and questionnaire
    Malvasi, Antonio
    Damiani, Gianluca Raffaello
    Vitagliano, Amerigo
    Dellino, Miriam
    Achiron, Reuven
    Ioannis, Kosmas
    Vimercati, Antonella
    Gaetani, Maria
    Cicinelli, Ettore
    Vinciguerra, Marina
    Ricci, Ilaria
    Tinelli, Andrea
    Baldini, Giorgio Maria
    Trojano, Giuseppe
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY AND REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY-X, 2023, 20
  • [7] Informed Consent from a Historical, Societal, Ethical, Legal, and Practical Perspective
    Jameson, Lee M.
    Al-Tarawneh, Sandra K.
    JOURNAL OF PROSTHODONTICS-IMPLANT ESTHETIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE DENTISTRY, 2022, 31 (06): : 464 - 471
  • [8] Doctor-family-patient relationship: The Chinese paradigm of informed consent
    Cong, YL
    JOURNAL OF MEDICINE AND PHILOSOPHY, 2004, 29 (02): : 149 - 178
  • [9] Ethical analysis of informed consent methods in longitudinal cohort studies: A Chinese perspective
    Li, Kun
    Huang, Mingtao
    Zhai, Xiaomei
    Wang, Chen
    DEVELOPING WORLD BIOETHICS, 2024,
  • [10] The Informed Consent in Allergology from a Scientific, Technological and Social Perspective
    Perez Pacareu, Marisela Luisa
    Morejon del Rosario, Yanet
    Suarez Rodriguez, Gloria Arlenys
    Rodriguez Carbajal, Aleima
    MEDISUR-REVISTA DE CIENCIAS MEDICAS DE CIENFUEGOS, 2015, 13 (05): : 581 - 600