Section: Module 2: Lesson 3: Understanding Risk and Questions of Disclosure | Medical Ethics Online | NextGenU.org
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Student Learning Outcomes:
Upon completion of this lesson, you will be able to:- Explain why the ethics of risk is important to patient care.
- Understand the importance of risk communication and disclosure in the context of patient care.
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Recommended Additional Readings and Activities
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Read the entire content. (13 minutes)
World Health Organization - 2021
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General Instructions: In this activity, you will demonstrate your understanding of ethical and legal frameworks through critical analysis of capacity assessment, risk management, and disclosure obligations in a mental health context.
Step 1: Review Lesson Summary
Review Module 2 Lesson Summary to prepare for this activity, focusing on:
"Common Terminology in Ethical and Legal Discourse" – fundamental concepts (ethics, law, autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, justice) and legal concepts (duty of care, negligence, capacity)
"Principles of Best Practice in Ethical and Legal Standards" – professional codes, the Four Principles Approach, and ethical decision-making processes
"Mental Health and Capacity Assessment" – understanding capacity as a functional approach, core components (understanding, retention, weighing, communication), and mental health considerations
"Legal Capacity and Consent in Healthcare" – mental capacity legislation principles, valid consent requirements, and involuntary treatment considerations
"Understanding Risk in Patient Care" – conceptualizing risk dimensions, ethical dimensions of risk management, and risk assessment in clinical practice
"Risk Communication and Disclosure" – principles of effective risk communication, disclosure obligations, and balancing obligations
Step 2: Critical Analysis and Response
Read the following clinical scenario:
A 34-year-old patient with bipolar disorder is admitted to the emergency department following a suicide attempt. After three days of medical stabilization, the patient's mood has improved and she is requesting discharge. She refuses psychiatric evaluation and inpatient psychiatric treatment, stating: "I'm fine now. It was just a moment of weakness. I want to go home." The treating physician is concerned about ongoing suicide risk and the patient's capacity to make this decision. The patient has a history of medication non-adherence and two previous suicide attempts during manic episodes. Her family reports she stopped taking her mood stabilizers three weeks ago. The patient appears oriented and able to articulate her reasoning but minimizes the seriousness of the attempt, stating: "Everyone has bad days." There is no advance directive or prior documentation of capacity assessments.
Based on your readings from the Module 2 Lesson Summary, compose a 700-900 word response addressing the following:
1. Ethical and Legal Terminology and Best Practice Principles (200-250 words)
Explain the common terminology used in ethical and legal discourse relevant to this scenario, including: capacity, competence, best interests, duty of care, voluntariness, and informed refusal
Describe the principles of best practice in relation to ethical and legal standards when managing patients with mental health conditions who refuse treatment, including respect for autonomy, protection from harm, least restrictive intervention, and procedural fairness
Discuss how these principles apply to the tension between respecting the patient's refusal and the physician's concern about suicide risk
2. Capacity Assessment in Mental Health (250-300 words)
Explain the necessary conditions of decision-making capacity as applied to patients with mental health problems, addressing the four functional elements: understanding, appreciation, reasoning, and expression of choice
Apply these conditions to assess whether this patient demonstrates capacity to refuse psychiatric treatment (consider: her ability to understand the risks of leaving, her appreciation of how her condition affects her, her reasoning process, and her ability to communicate a choice)
Distinguish between ethical capacity and legal capacity in relation to consent, explaining how a patient may have legal capacity to refuse treatment even when that decision seems unwise or potentially harmful
Discuss how capacity can fluctuate in patients with bipolar disorder and the implications for ongoing assessment in this case
3. Risk Assessment, Communication, and Disclosure (200-250 words)
Explain why the ethics of risk assessment is central to patient care in this scenario, including the physician's duties to assess risk of self-harm, balance protection with autonomy, and determine proportionality of intervention
Analyze the importance of risk communication and disclosure in this patient's care, including what risks should be disclosed to the patient, how to communicate risk in a way that supports informed decision-making, and documentation requirements
Discuss the ethical justifications for potentially limiting autonomy when risk is significant (harm principle, duty to protect), and critically evaluate what level of suicide risk would justify involuntary psychiatric treatment or detention
Explain what ethical and legal safeguards must be in place before overriding a patient's refusal of treatment
Your response should integrate ethical frameworks and legal principles, demonstrate nuanced understanding of capacity in mental health contexts, and apply risk assessment principles to clinical decision-making based on the Module 2 Lesson Summary.
Step 3: Submit
Submit your response through the course platform. Prepare your work as a Google Document or Word document, then upload or paste your complete response into the assignment submission area. Make sure to reference others' intellectual property when necessary. All references should follow 7th Edition APA formatting. For further instructions, see the resource on the Himmelfarb Health Sciences Library: APA citation resource (N.B.: references are excluded from word counts).
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Quiz: Module 2
To access the quiz, click on the name of the quiz provided above. On the following screen, click the attempt quiz button to view the case studies and respond to the questions.
TO PASS THIS QUIZ YOU MUST OBTAIN A SCORE OF 80%.
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Recommended Additional Readings
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(3 hours 25 minutes)
Handbook for Good Clinical Research Practice (GPC) - 2005
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