There are numerous challenges to implementing an effective informed consent process – that is, one in which the patient fully understands the health care treatment or surgical procedure they are agreeing to undergo. Even after signing a consent form, patients frequently do not understand the risks, benefits and alternatives involved in their course of treatment or surgical procedure – all of which are imperative for a patient to provide valid authorization. 1 Stated simply, informed consent in medical care is a process of communication between a clinician and a patient that results in the patient’s authorization or agreement to undergo a specific medical intervention (see sidebar box for The Joint Commission’s glossary definition). In addition to the process of communicating to their patients, clinicians are concerned with obtaining the evidence of consent that serves to document their legal and ethical responsibility. Unfortunately, the emphasis on obtaining a patient’s signature as documentation of informed consent results in varying effectiveness of the communication between a clinician and a patient. 1,2 The process of obtaining informed consent is an essential aspect of patient-centered care and remains central to patient safety. The Joint Commission’s Sentinel Event database includes 49 reports of informed consent-related sentinel events over the 2010-2021 timeframe; 36 of the reports were specifically related to wrong site surgery, and six were related to operative or post-operative complication. Other reports were related to elopement, falls, medication errors, unintended retentions, and suicide.
Health care organizations can improve the process of informed consent and enhance the safety of their patients by doing the following:
Providers can improve the process of informed consent and enhance the safety of their patients by doing the following:
1. Kinnersley P, Phillips K, Savage K, et al. Interventions to promote informed consent for patients undergoing surgical and other invasive healthcare procedures. Cochrane’s Review. The Cochrane Library. 2013 July 6;(7):CD009445. doi: 10.0112/14651858.CD009445.pub2.
2. Matiasek J, and Wynia, MK. Reconceptualizing the informed consent process at eight innovative hospitals . Joint Commission Journal on Quality and Patient Safety. Mar. 2008;34(3):127-37.
3. Bottrell MM, et al. Hospital informed consent for procedure forms: Facilitating quality patient-physician interaction. Archives of Surgery. January 2000;Vol. 135.
4. Elwyn G, et al. Shared decision making: A model for clinical practice . Journal of General Internal Medicine. Oct. 2012;27(10):1361–1367.
7. Schenker Y, and Meisel A. Informed consent in clinical care: Practical considerations in the effort to achieve ethical goals. Journal of the American Medical Association. Mar. 16, 2011;305(11):1130-1.
8. National Quality Forum (NQF). Safe practices for better healthcare – 2010 update: A consensus report. Washington, DC: NQF; 2010.
9. Schyve PM. Language differences as a barrier to quality and safety in health care: The Joint Commission perspective. Journal of General Internal Medicine. Nov. 2007;22(Supplement 2):360-1.
13. Chittem M and Butow P. Responding to family requests for nondisclosure: The impact of oncologists’ cultural background. Journal of Cancer Research & Therapeutics. 2015;11(1)174-180.
14. Hanssen I. An intercultural nursing perspective on autonomy. Nursing Ethics. 2004;11(1)28-41.
15. Piamjariyakul U, et al. End-of-life preferences and presence of advance directives among ethnic populations with severe chronic cardiovascular illnesses. Journal of the Working Group on Cardiovascular Nursing of the European Society of Cardiology. 2014;13(2)185-189.
16. Ruiz-Casares M. Research ethics in global mental health: Advancing culturally responsive mental health research. Transcultural Psychiatry. 2014;51(6)790-805.
17. Balfour D. Frequent questions on informed consent. OR Manager. April 2009;25(4):23-5.
18. Childers R, et al. Informed consent and the surgeon. Journal of the American College of Surgeons. April 2009;208(4):627-34.
Note: This is not an all-inclusive list.
Legal disclaimer: This material is meant as an information piece only; it is not a standard or a Sentinel Event Alert.
The intent of Quick Safety is to raise awareness and to be helpful to Joint Commission-accredited organizations.
The information in this publication is derived from actual events that occur in health care.