Ethics in The Hospital
Ethics in The Hospital
Ethics in The Hospital
Learning Objectives-
Recognize ethical dilemmas and be able to approach them appropriately
Describe the two models of ethical work up
Be able to determine if a patient has capacity to make medical decisions
Go over the informed consent process
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1
The 4 Boxes Method-
Describe the Patient's quality of life Social, legal, economic, and institutional
in the patient's terms. circumstances in the case that can:
What is the patient's subjective
acceptance of likely quality of life? influence the decision
What are the views of the care be influenced by the decision
providers about the quality of life?
Is quality of life "less than e.g., inability to pay for treatment;
minimal?" (i.e., qualitative futility) inadequate social support
2
Additional considerations in your analysis of competing issues and values:
Does the patient have decisional capacity?
o This can be very challenging to determine (See attached case by Dr.
Merel)
o Four elements to consider are:
Understanding: the patient can comprehend information
Appreciation: the patient can appreciate significance of information
Reasoning: the patient can weight the risks, benefits and alternatives
Ability to express choice
o Decisional capacity is different than competence, which is determined
only in a court of law.
References:
3
Ethics in the Hospital Problem Set:
Problem #1: A 45 year old homeless woman is admitted with cellulitis and abscess. She
is clinically ready for discharge the following day but tells you that she cannot go to the
streets because she will need to be continuously walking and because she is unable to
change her dressings. Respite has no beds. What are the ethical issues and what will you
do?
Problem #2: An inebriated 59 year old man is admitted for alcohol withdrawal. He
requires aggressive IV fluids and electrolyte replacement but no IV access is available.
You want to put in a central venous catheter, but he refuses. No family is available. What
are the ethical issues and what will you do?
Problem #3: A 92 year old female who is hard of hearing but otherwise mentally intact is
admitted for a C1-C2 fracture after an unwitnessed fall. The family tells you that she was
driving two months ago. The options are for her to be lying down for the rest of her life in
a neck brace or to receive a high-risk operative fixation. What are the ethical issues and
what will you do?
Problem #4: A 40 year old male with ESRD walks off an international flight and is
brought to the Harborview ED, where he is found to have a K+ of 8.0 and a creatinine of
12. What are the ethical issues? What is the law? What should be done for him now, and
what should be done chronically, when no one else in the community will hemodialyze
him?
Problem #5: You are the admitting doctor for one of the Mariners. Do you tell your
spouse about this patient?
Problem #6: A homeless 48 yo man with a h/o alcohol abuse is admitted for withdrawal;
this is his 3rd hospitalization after he was diagnosed with localized colon cancer. He has
failed to follow up for definitive care. He improves and the UDF wants to know if you’re
discharging him. What are the ethical issues and what will you do?
Problem #7: A 44 year old male with A2 HIV does not believe that he has this illness. He
presents requesting treatment for erectile dysfunction. What are the ethical issues and
what will you do?