• Home
  • Practice Focus
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
    • How I Do It
    • TRIO Best Practices
  • Business of Medicine
    • Health Policy
    • Legal Matters
    • Practice Management
    • Tech Talk
    • AI
  • Literature Reviews
    • Facial Plastic/Reconstructive
    • Head and Neck
    • Laryngology
    • Otology/Neurotology
    • Pediatric
    • Rhinology
    • Sleep Medicine
  • Career
    • Medical Education
    • Professional Development
    • Resident Focus
  • ENT Perspectives
    • ENT Expressions
    • Everyday Ethics
    • From TRIO
    • The Great Debate
    • Letter From the Editor
    • Rx: Wellness
    • The Voice
    • Viewpoint
  • TRIO Resources
    • Triological Society
    • The Laryngoscope
    • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
    • TRIO Combined Sections Meetings
    • COSM
    • Related Otolaryngology Events
  • Search

How Informed Are Your Patients?

by Richard Quinn • January 20, 2017

  • Tweet
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Print-Friendly Version

The process of obtaining informed consent from a patient is among the thorniest legal issues an otolaryngologist faces when managing surgical procedures. However, Jeffrey Wolf, MD, believes the process can be easy to start; specifically, he recommends that physicians begin by looking a patient in the eye, at his or her level.

You Might Also Like

  • How Informed Are Your Patients?
  • The Evolution of Informed Consent
  • A New Look at Informed Consent: Recent guidelines prompt patient-centered approach
  • How Physicians Can Help Make Sure Patients are Accurately Informed
Explore This Issue
January 2017

“Something I always do when I’m talking to a patient about surgery … I always sit down,” said Dr. Wolf, associate professor and associate chair of clinical practice of otorhinolaryngology-head and neck surgery at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore. “I’m never standing; I never want them to feel like I’m rushed. I always sit down, because if you sit down for two minutes, they feel like you spent a lot more time with them than if you stood up.”

Time and effort might be the two most important factors in establishing a rapport with a patient that helps ensure that the informed consent process works as intended, Dr. Wolf said. And informed consent is just that—a process that needs to be honed to make sure patients are truly informed.

© Bacho / shutterstock.com

© Bacho / shutterstock.com

Why is informed consent so important? Research presented in 2007 found that between 1985 and 2005, 37% of all malpractice claims involving endoscopic sinus surgery (ESS) also involved informed consent (Am J Rhinol. 2007;21:584-590). Furthermore, the researchers found that 16% of all otolaryngology malpractice claims centered on informed consent. More recently, of the 48,589 malpractice claims reported to the PIAA (formerly known as the Physician Insurers Association of America) Data Sharing Project between 2010 and 2014, 12,865 (28%) resulted in payment to the plaintiff. Additionally, 740 named an otolaryngologist in the claim, with 298 (40%) of those resulting in payment to the plaintiff.

“It is higher than what the broader community is, which prompts us to ask what variables contribute to these cases resulting in higher payment,” said Divya Parikh, MPH, PIAA’s vice president of research and risk management.

The numbers only get worse for surgical procedures that involve the nasal region. Malpractice claims reported to the PIAA for these procedures over the five-year period from 2010 through 2014 totaled 311, and approximately half of those resulted in payment.

Leigh Sowerby, MDTraditionally, in medicine, we think of informed consent as a piece of paper that the patient signs, but that’s not what informed consent is. Informed consent is actually the discussion around surgery and the process by which that piece of paper is signed. —Leigh Sowerby, MD

What Is Informed Consent?

The medical–legal implications of informed consent are often misunderstood, according to Leigh Sowerby, MD, assistant professor in otolaryngology-head and neck surgery at Western University in London, Ontario, in Canada. “Traditionally, in medicine, we think of informed consent as a piece of paper that the patient signs, but that’s not what informed consent is,” he said. “Informed consent is actually the discussion around surgery and the process by which that piece of paper is signed.”

Pages: 1 2 3 4 | Single Page

Filed Under: Features, Home Slider Tagged With: informed consent, informed consent process, informing patients, patient careIssue: January 2017

You Might Also Like:

  • How Informed Are Your Patients?
  • The Evolution of Informed Consent
  • A New Look at Informed Consent: Recent guidelines prompt patient-centered approach
  • How Physicians Can Help Make Sure Patients are Accurately Informed

The Triological SocietyENTtoday is a publication of The Triological Society.

Polls

Would you choose a concierge physician as your PCP?

View Results

Loading ... Loading ...
  • Polls Archive

Top Articles for Residents

  • Applications Open for Resident Members of ENTtoday Edit Board
  • How To Provide Helpful Feedback To Residents
  • Call for Resident Bowl Questions
  • New Standardized Otolaryngology Curriculum Launching July 1 Should Be Valuable Resource For Physicians Around The World
  • Do Training Programs Give Otolaryngology Residents the Necessary Tools to Do Productive Research?
  • Popular this Week
  • Most Popular
  • Most Recent
    • A Journey Through Pay Inequity: A Physician’s Firsthand Account

    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • Is Middle Ear Pressure Affected by Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Use?

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • The Dramatic Rise in Tongue Tie and Lip Tie Treatment

    • Rating Laryngopharyngeal Reflux Severity: How Do Two Common Instruments Compare?

    • Is Middle Ear Pressure Affected by Continuous Positive Airway Pressure Use?

    • Otolaryngologists Are Still Debating the Effectiveness of Tongue Tie Treatment

    • Complications for When Physicians Change a Maiden Name

    • Excitement Around Gene Therapy for Hearing Restoration
    • “Small” Acts of Kindness
    • How To: Endoscopic Total Maxillectomy Without Facial Skin Incision
    • Science Communities Must Speak Out When Policies Threaten Health and Safety
    • Observation Most Cost-Effective in Addressing AECRS in Absence of Bacterial Infection

Follow Us

  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • The Triological Society
  • The Laryngoscope
  • Laryngoscope Investigative Otolaryngology
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Cookies

Wiley

Copyright © 2025 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved, including rights for text and data mining and training of artificial technologies or similar technologies. ISSN 1559-4939