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How Informed Are Your Patients?

by Richard Quinn • January 20, 2017

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“I go into specific risks regarding the area in which we’re working,” she said. “So, specifically for sinus surgery, I say, ‘You just want to remember that we’re working right around the eyes and right underneath the brain, and so, because we’re so close to those structures, I have to tell you that they are “at risk.” But, knowing the overall risk of those potential complications is less than 1% overall, you can feel comfortable that it’s really a minimal risk’ … Presenting it in that sort of fashion allows the patient to understand that [potential complications are] there, but they’re not some major thing that always happens that they have to focus on.”

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Explore This Issue
January 2017

Dr. Patel, who is also a co-author and editor of the textbook Office-Based Rhinology: Principles and Techniques (Plural Publishing Inc., 2013), said that while one reason for the process of informed consent is to protect the physician from liability, that is not the main purpose. Patients need this process to truly understand and weigh all the risks and benefits of their choice, and they can be frightened by jargon and confused by terms they’ve never heard.

Mostly, she said, patients just want to be comfortably prepared when facing a procedure. “Telling the patient how many of these procedures you have done can put them more at ease—and letting them know it is a very common procedure,” added Dr. Patel. “Often, when we do sinus surgery, we use

computer-guided navigation, and that can also make them feel a little bit more assured about it, even though there hasn’t been any evidence showing that its use decreases risk at all. … All those things kind of come into the conversation to allay their fears.”

Dr. Wolf said the best way to ensure that a patient’s consent is fully informed is to build a relationship. He noted the old adage that the best ways to avoid getting sued are “affability, availability, and ability—in that order.”

“It’s about building a rapport,” he added, acknowledging that this isn’t always easy to do, especially when physicians spend a lot of their time staring at computer screens when talking to patients, and when they need to see a certain number of patients within a certain period of time. However, he added, “If you have a relationship with your patient and they like you, they’re less likely to sue you,” he said.


Richard Quinn is a freelance medical writer based in New Jersey.

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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

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