Informed Consent: Difference between revisions

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== Introduction ==
== Introduction ==
Simply, informed concept refers to the patient's right to be informed on their condition, risks, benefits and treatment options. It entitles the healthcare professionals to include their patients into their clinical reasoning process to reach a shared- decision. Roles and regulations are different from a country to another. In some circumstances you will find yourself challenged by the available resources, culture and your patient's capacity to make their own decisions.
Ethically, informed consent is the core of moral practice that justifies autonomy, dignity and respect for our patients.
Understanding the proposed options and voluntarily giving permission without controlled influence are necessities of informed consent<ref>DELANY C. ''Informed Consent: ethical theory, legal obligationsand the physiotherapy clinical encounter'' (Doctoral dissertation).</ref>.
The emphasis of self-management is widely supported int he evidence. Patients has to show motivation, willingness and active cooperation to the treatment. Adapting a patient-centered practice cannot be validated unless patient has consented on every aspect of it.


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Revision as of 19:53, 1 July 2019

Introduction[edit | edit source]

Simply, informed concept refers to the patient's right to be informed on their condition, risks, benefits and treatment options. It entitles the healthcare professionals to include their patients into their clinical reasoning process to reach a shared- decision. Roles and regulations are different from a country to another. In some circumstances you will find yourself challenged by the available resources, culture and your patient's capacity to make their own decisions.

Ethically, informed consent is the core of moral practice that justifies autonomy, dignity and respect for our patients.

Understanding the proposed options and voluntarily giving permission without controlled influence are necessities of informed consent[1].

The emphasis of self-management is widely supported int he evidence. Patients has to show motivation, willingness and active cooperation to the treatment. Adapting a patient-centered practice cannot be validated unless patient has consented on every aspect of it.

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Sub Heading 3[edit | edit source]

Resources[edit | edit source]

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References[edit | edit source]

  1. DELANY C. Informed Consent: ethical theory, legal obligationsand the physiotherapy clinical encounter (Doctoral dissertation).