Part A-C
Part C and D
Elements of Conformed Consent
ECC II
ECC III
100

Name the different parts of Consent 

What is Part A: Health Literacy 

Part B: Minors Healthcare Decision making Rights 

Part C: when you do not need to obtain consent 

When you obtain consent from someone else 

Part D: How to help a patient make an informed decision 

100

When a patient is unable to make or communicate a healthcare decision or when a partient doesn't want to make a decision who is assigned? 

What is a medical power of attorney 
100

What are the elements of informed consent 

What is Context, information, comprehension, and voluntariness 

100

What can subjected standard need for information be affected by: 

What is: 

Culture, ethnicity, values

Risk adversity

Personality and education 

Prior experiences with disease/illness or treatment options 

Life-style considerations 

100

Ensure patient understanding of the information provided describes what term? 

What is comprehension 
200

A pharmacist communicates with patients in terms that are understandable 

What is Health Literacy

200

What authority do a medical power of attorney have? 

What is make all decision regarding medical treatment, care, and custody including those that extend being the patients death 

Request, examine, or copy the patients medical record 

Consent or refuse consent, to disclosure of the patient's healthcare information 

200

Consent Discussion is equal to 

What is delivering bad news 

200

What should you discuss for each treatment option ( including non treatment) 

What is 

Its purpose 

What is involved ( procedure, length, frequency, recovery time, and how it will affect their lives 

The prognosis 

Whether time is of the essence 

200

What are some examples of how you can ensure the patient is comprehending? 

What is

Have the patient repeat major points (diagnosis, options, risks, etc.). 

Have the patient describe how the potential benefits and harms would affect them given their goals, values, life-style, etc.

Have the patient state what will happen without treatment.

Have the patient repeat medication information and instructions.

300

What healthcare rights of minor that you can be ANY AGE to discuss information with them? 

What is substance abuse, STD's , reproductive heath, and minor parents can consent to all healthcare for their children 

300

This person has decision-making authority if the patient is unable to make or communicate a healthcare decision and has not appointed a healthcare agent

What is a healthcare representative 

300

High levels of ____ negatively affect how education is received by newly diagnosed patients with disease by decreasing comprehension, retention, and patient satisfaction

What is anxiety 

300

Pharmacist must offer to discuss the medication including but not limited to: 

What is 

Name and description of the drug.

Dosage form, dose, route of administration and duration of therapy.

Intended use of the drug and expected action or result.

Common severe side effects, adverse effects or interactions.

Therapeutic contraindications that may be encountered.

Techniques for self-monitoring of drug therapy.

Proper storage of the drug.

Prescription refill information.

Action to be taken in the event of a missed dose.

Directions or precautions for preparation, administration or use by the patient.


300

A patient nt makes a choice they would not have otherwise made if not for being deceived or someone using excessive/improper pressure 

What is Undue influence 

400

True or False: In medical emergencies informed consent is required based on the presumption that a reasonable prudent person would want to be saved 

What is false

400

True or False: A healthcare representative has the same authority as a healthcare agent and court approval is not required 

What is true

400

What standard is what a "reasonable prudent patient" would need to know to make an informed decision or information that would be substantial factor in a patients decision - making process

What is objective standard

400

What information should you give about HARMS of drugs 

What is 

Discuss the PROBABILITY, MAGNITUDE & DURATION of each harm along with how you will try to prevent it and what you will do if it does happen.


Explain the difficulty in extrapolating from research to individual patients; openly acknowledge uncertainty.


Discuss the various kinds of harms that may be experienced such as physical, psychological, economic (e.g., employment), familial and social.

400

Threat of harm that can be physical, financial or relational (abandonment, involuntary commitment, financial threats for “signing out” AMA, telling patients they can’t leave, etc.)

What is Coercion 

500

When the informed consent (exception) does not apply 

What is to a patient who have previously stated their wishes to have life- sustaining / life saving treatment withheld whether verbally or by way of an advance directive, DNR order or declaration of Faith

500

Who's is first on a priority list for Healthcare Representatives? 

What is Spouse, Adult Child, Parent, Adult Sibling, Grandparents, Adult grandchild, Adult Niece, Nephew, Aunt, or Uncle, Adult friend 

500

What standard is what the particular patient in front of you needs to know to make an informed decision. 

What is subjective standard

500

What obligation increases in relation to the probability, magnitude or duration of harm

What is comprehension 

500

What are three main points for voluntariness 

What is 

Respect for autonomy doesn't mean you can’t try to persuade your patient.

Patients can change their mind at any time, and if the situation is not emergent suggest that they take some time to make a decision.

Ensure the patient is able to make a voluntary decision, free from undue influence and coercion.

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