Deck 5: Informed Consent

ملء الشاشة (f)
exit full mode
سؤال
Patients are legitimately judged incompetent in cases of

A) reluctance by the patient to undergo treatment.
B) intellectual disability and dementia.
C) the patient's refusal of treatment.
D) terminal disease.
استخدم زر المسافة أو
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لقلب البطاقة.
سؤال
Physicians are often not obligated to provide disclosure in cases of

A) waiver.
B) serious illness.
C) dubious medical procedures.
D) physician incompetence.
سؤال
Tom L. Beauchamp defines informed consent as

A) shared decision-making.
B) transparency.
C) autonomous authorization.
D) universal validity.
سؤال
The consent of an informed, competent, understanding patient cannot be legitimate unless it is given

A) with permission from family members.
B) without fear.
C) by a legal authority.
D) voluntarily.
سؤال
From a strictly Kantian viewpoint, therapeutic privilege is

A) always permissible.
B) respectful to persons.
C) never permissible.
D) necessary.
سؤال
A(n) _______ would judge whether a physician should obtain informed consent according to the benefits generated for all concerned.

A) Kantian
B) rule-utilitarian
C) act-utilitarian
D) Rawlsian contract theorist
سؤال
A(n) _______ would judge whether a physician should obtain informed consent according to the consequences that would result if physicians were consistently required to secure informed consent.

A) Kantian
B) rule-utilitarian
C) act-utilitarian
D) Rawlsian contract theorist
سؤال
A(n) _______ would judge that informed consent is an absolute requirement on the basis of respecting individual autonomy.

A) Kantian
B) rule-utilitarian
C) act-utilitarian
D) Rawlsian contract theorist
سؤال
A(n) _______ would argue in support of the doctrine of informed consent on the grounds that treating people without their informed authorization would be a violation of basic liberties.

A) Kantian
B) rule-utilitarian
C) act-utilitarian
D) Rawlsian contract theorist
سؤال
The case of Canterbury v. Spence was an important ruling regarding informed consent. It focused primarily on

A) patient competence.
B) adequacy of disclosure.
C) waiver of informed consent.
D) coercion.
سؤال
The idea of _______ arises from the intuition that patients, as autonomous persons, should have the ultimate say in what is done to their bodies, and that they ought not to be treated without their voluntary, knowledgeable agreement.

A) confidentiality
B) therapeutic privilege
C) informed consent
D) competence
سؤال
In the ethical ideal, consent is more than _______-more than the patient's giving into the physician's wishes or doing what is expected.

A) assent
B) autonomous authorization
C) shared decision-making
D) therapeutic privilege
سؤال
Physicians are not obligated to provide disclosure in all situations. Which of the following describes an exception to physicians' duty to obtain informed consent?

A) An emergency, when stopping to obtain consent could seriously harm the patient
B) Patient incompetence
C) Patient waiver
D) All of the above
سؤال
A physician is treating a 23-year-old patient for a terminal illness. The patient is already extremely distraught and depressed, so the physician decides to withhold relevant information-reasoning that the disclosure would likely do great harm and not much good. The physical is exercising

A) therapeutic privilege.
B) informed consent.
C) confidentiality.
D) respect for persons.
سؤال
A patient is generally considered to possess decision-making capacity if they

A) appreciate the nature of the recommended care.
B) understand their medical diagnosis and prognosis.
C) make decisions consistent with their values.
D) All of the above
سؤال
Philosophers have justified informed consent through appeals to the principles of autonomy and beneficence.
سؤال
Throughout medical history, physicians have practiced the healing arts while putting great emphasis on informed consent.
سؤال
Many critics see huge discrepancies between the ethical ideal of informed consent and the laws or rules meant to implement it.
سؤال
True informed consent is merely a matter of warning the patient of the risks of treatment.
سؤال
To determine a patient's decision-making capacity, a court must usually get involved.
سؤال
Courts currently uphold the view that that disclosure is adequate if it meets the customary standards of medical practice
سؤال
Most of the time, people are presumed to be competent unless there are good reasons to think otherwise.
سؤال
A patient might be judged incompetent due to alcoholism.
سؤال
The ethical doctrine of informed consent says that disclosure is adequate if it allows patients to intelligently weigh the risks and benefits of available choices.
سؤال
The duty of physicians to obtain informed consent has no exceptions.
سؤال
Refusal to submit to a recommended treatment can be taken as evidence of a lack of understanding.
سؤال
Manipulation is the intentional use of a credible and severe threat of harm or force to control another.
سؤال
Giving false or misleading information or withholding relevant facts is a form of coercion.
سؤال
From a Kantian viewpoint, waiving informed consent is allowed.
سؤال
In medicine, the attending physician is often the one who determines whether a patient is able to make decisions regarding his/her medical care.
سؤال
What are the five conditions required for informed consent?
سؤال
What are the four pieces of information courts currently mandate to fulfill the obligation of adequate disclosure of information for informed consent?
سؤال
Define and contrast informed consent as autonomous authorization and informed consent as shared decision making.
سؤال
In determining whether a patient has decision-making capacity, physicians must often talk to the patient's friends or family members. Explain why this can be an important resource.
سؤال
Imagine you are a physician trying to determine whether a patient has decision-making capacity. What are some questions you could ask to determine that they a) understand the information you have disclosed to them, and b) appreciate the consequences of their choices?
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "The Concept of Informed Consent," Ruth R. Faden and Tom L. Beauchamp
-Faden and Beauchamp believe that the tendency to equate informed consent with shared decision-making is

A) irrelevant.
B) rare.
C) confused.
D) untimely.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "The Concept of Informed Consent," Ruth R. Faden and Tom L. Beauchamp
-Faden and Beauchamp say that the idea of real informed consent suggests that a patient in the act of consent

A) yields all control to medical professionals.
B) does not really authorize anything.
C) never really acts autonomously.
D) actively authorizes a proposal or action.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "The Concept of Informed Consent," Ruth R. Faden and Tom L. Beauchamp
-Faden and Beauchamp believe that the idea of informed consent

A) does not entail that the patient and physician "share decision-making."
B) entails that the patient and physician "share decision-making."
C) entails that the patient and physician always reach a decision together.
D) entails that the patient and physician never reach a decision together.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "Informed Consent-Must It Remain a Fairy Tale?," Jay Katz
-Katz says that the most formidable obstacle to disclosure and consent is

A) medical technology.
B) medical uncertainty.
C) bureaucratic regulations.
D) poor decision-making skills.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "Informed Consent-Must It Remain a Fairy Tale?," Jay Katz
-Katz says that genuine self-determination in patient decision-making is

A) nonexistent.
B) exercised in most situations.
C) still not the norm.
D) the norm.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "Informed Consent-Must It Remain a Fairy Tale?," Jay Katz
-Katz says that the goal of joint decision-making between physicians and patients is

A) fulfilled in modern medicine.
B) unintelligible.
C) still unfulfilled.
D) misguided.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "Transparency: Informed Consent in Primary Care," Howard Brody
-According to Brody, the "conversation standard"

A) does not lend itself to ready translation into a useful legal standard.
B) lends itself well to legal review.
C) is the model that gives the best guidance in informed consent.
D) is rejected by Jay Katz.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "Transparency: Informed Consent in Primary Care," Howard Brody
-According to Brody, informed consent is still seen by physicians as

A) an essential part of patient care.
B) bureaucratic legalism.
C) a realistic and useful part of patient care.
D) a way to satisfy the low demand for information among patients.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: "Transparency: Informed Consent in Primary Care," Howard Brody
-To operationalize the best features of the conversation model in medical practice, Brody proposes the _______ standard.

A) legal
B) bureaucratic
C) full disclosure
D) transparency
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: Canterbury v. Spence, U.S. Court of Appeals
-In the Canterbury ruling, the court said the adequacy of disclosure by a physician should be judged by

A) the patient's need for relevant information.
B) the medical profession.
C) legal standards.
D) the state of medical technology.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: Canterbury v. Spence, U.S. Court of Appeals
-In Canterbury v. Spence, the court said that the patient's right of self-decision

A) shapes the boundaries of the duty to treat.
B) shapes the boundaries of the duty to reveal.
C) dictates what the physician can and cannot say.
D) shapes the boundaries of medical practice.
سؤال
The Following Questions For Readings: Canterbury v. Spence, U.S. Court of Appeals
-In Canterbury v. Spence, the court declared that the topics importantly demanding communication of information include the

A) costs of the treatment.
B) inherent and potential hazards of the proposed treatment.
C) physician's formal education.
D) inherent hazards of following the physician's advice.
فتح الحزمة
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ملء الشاشة (f)
exit full mode
Deck 5: Informed Consent
1
Patients are legitimately judged incompetent in cases of

A) reluctance by the patient to undergo treatment.
B) intellectual disability and dementia.
C) the patient's refusal of treatment.
D) terminal disease.
B
2
Physicians are often not obligated to provide disclosure in cases of

A) waiver.
B) serious illness.
C) dubious medical procedures.
D) physician incompetence.
A
3
Tom L. Beauchamp defines informed consent as

A) shared decision-making.
B) transparency.
C) autonomous authorization.
D) universal validity.
C
4
The consent of an informed, competent, understanding patient cannot be legitimate unless it is given

A) with permission from family members.
B) without fear.
C) by a legal authority.
D) voluntarily.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
5
From a strictly Kantian viewpoint, therapeutic privilege is

A) always permissible.
B) respectful to persons.
C) never permissible.
D) necessary.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
6
A(n) _______ would judge whether a physician should obtain informed consent according to the benefits generated for all concerned.

A) Kantian
B) rule-utilitarian
C) act-utilitarian
D) Rawlsian contract theorist
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
7
A(n) _______ would judge whether a physician should obtain informed consent according to the consequences that would result if physicians were consistently required to secure informed consent.

A) Kantian
B) rule-utilitarian
C) act-utilitarian
D) Rawlsian contract theorist
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
8
A(n) _______ would judge that informed consent is an absolute requirement on the basis of respecting individual autonomy.

A) Kantian
B) rule-utilitarian
C) act-utilitarian
D) Rawlsian contract theorist
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
9
A(n) _______ would argue in support of the doctrine of informed consent on the grounds that treating people without their informed authorization would be a violation of basic liberties.

A) Kantian
B) rule-utilitarian
C) act-utilitarian
D) Rawlsian contract theorist
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
10
The case of Canterbury v. Spence was an important ruling regarding informed consent. It focused primarily on

A) patient competence.
B) adequacy of disclosure.
C) waiver of informed consent.
D) coercion.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
11
The idea of _______ arises from the intuition that patients, as autonomous persons, should have the ultimate say in what is done to their bodies, and that they ought not to be treated without their voluntary, knowledgeable agreement.

A) confidentiality
B) therapeutic privilege
C) informed consent
D) competence
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
12
In the ethical ideal, consent is more than _______-more than the patient's giving into the physician's wishes or doing what is expected.

A) assent
B) autonomous authorization
C) shared decision-making
D) therapeutic privilege
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
13
Physicians are not obligated to provide disclosure in all situations. Which of the following describes an exception to physicians' duty to obtain informed consent?

A) An emergency, when stopping to obtain consent could seriously harm the patient
B) Patient incompetence
C) Patient waiver
D) All of the above
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
14
A physician is treating a 23-year-old patient for a terminal illness. The patient is already extremely distraught and depressed, so the physician decides to withhold relevant information-reasoning that the disclosure would likely do great harm and not much good. The physical is exercising

A) therapeutic privilege.
B) informed consent.
C) confidentiality.
D) respect for persons.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
15
A patient is generally considered to possess decision-making capacity if they

A) appreciate the nature of the recommended care.
B) understand their medical diagnosis and prognosis.
C) make decisions consistent with their values.
D) All of the above
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
16
Philosophers have justified informed consent through appeals to the principles of autonomy and beneficence.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
17
Throughout medical history, physicians have practiced the healing arts while putting great emphasis on informed consent.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
18
Many critics see huge discrepancies between the ethical ideal of informed consent and the laws or rules meant to implement it.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
19
True informed consent is merely a matter of warning the patient of the risks of treatment.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
20
To determine a patient's decision-making capacity, a court must usually get involved.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
21
Courts currently uphold the view that that disclosure is adequate if it meets the customary standards of medical practice
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
22
Most of the time, people are presumed to be competent unless there are good reasons to think otherwise.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
23
A patient might be judged incompetent due to alcoholism.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
24
The ethical doctrine of informed consent says that disclosure is adequate if it allows patients to intelligently weigh the risks and benefits of available choices.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
25
The duty of physicians to obtain informed consent has no exceptions.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
26
Refusal to submit to a recommended treatment can be taken as evidence of a lack of understanding.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
27
Manipulation is the intentional use of a credible and severe threat of harm or force to control another.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
28
Giving false or misleading information or withholding relevant facts is a form of coercion.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
29
From a Kantian viewpoint, waiving informed consent is allowed.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
30
In medicine, the attending physician is often the one who determines whether a patient is able to make decisions regarding his/her medical care.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
31
What are the five conditions required for informed consent?
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
32
What are the four pieces of information courts currently mandate to fulfill the obligation of adequate disclosure of information for informed consent?
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
33
Define and contrast informed consent as autonomous authorization and informed consent as shared decision making.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
34
In determining whether a patient has decision-making capacity, physicians must often talk to the patient's friends or family members. Explain why this can be an important resource.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
35
Imagine you are a physician trying to determine whether a patient has decision-making capacity. What are some questions you could ask to determine that they a) understand the information you have disclosed to them, and b) appreciate the consequences of their choices?
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
36
The Following Questions For Readings: "The Concept of Informed Consent," Ruth R. Faden and Tom L. Beauchamp
-Faden and Beauchamp believe that the tendency to equate informed consent with shared decision-making is

A) irrelevant.
B) rare.
C) confused.
D) untimely.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
37
The Following Questions For Readings: "The Concept of Informed Consent," Ruth R. Faden and Tom L. Beauchamp
-Faden and Beauchamp say that the idea of real informed consent suggests that a patient in the act of consent

A) yields all control to medical professionals.
B) does not really authorize anything.
C) never really acts autonomously.
D) actively authorizes a proposal or action.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
38
The Following Questions For Readings: "The Concept of Informed Consent," Ruth R. Faden and Tom L. Beauchamp
-Faden and Beauchamp believe that the idea of informed consent

A) does not entail that the patient and physician "share decision-making."
B) entails that the patient and physician "share decision-making."
C) entails that the patient and physician always reach a decision together.
D) entails that the patient and physician never reach a decision together.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
39
The Following Questions For Readings: "Informed Consent-Must It Remain a Fairy Tale?," Jay Katz
-Katz says that the most formidable obstacle to disclosure and consent is

A) medical technology.
B) medical uncertainty.
C) bureaucratic regulations.
D) poor decision-making skills.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
40
The Following Questions For Readings: "Informed Consent-Must It Remain a Fairy Tale?," Jay Katz
-Katz says that genuine self-determination in patient decision-making is

A) nonexistent.
B) exercised in most situations.
C) still not the norm.
D) the norm.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
41
The Following Questions For Readings: "Informed Consent-Must It Remain a Fairy Tale?," Jay Katz
-Katz says that the goal of joint decision-making between physicians and patients is

A) fulfilled in modern medicine.
B) unintelligible.
C) still unfulfilled.
D) misguided.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
42
The Following Questions For Readings: "Transparency: Informed Consent in Primary Care," Howard Brody
-According to Brody, the "conversation standard"

A) does not lend itself to ready translation into a useful legal standard.
B) lends itself well to legal review.
C) is the model that gives the best guidance in informed consent.
D) is rejected by Jay Katz.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
43
The Following Questions For Readings: "Transparency: Informed Consent in Primary Care," Howard Brody
-According to Brody, informed consent is still seen by physicians as

A) an essential part of patient care.
B) bureaucratic legalism.
C) a realistic and useful part of patient care.
D) a way to satisfy the low demand for information among patients.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
44
The Following Questions For Readings: "Transparency: Informed Consent in Primary Care," Howard Brody
-To operationalize the best features of the conversation model in medical practice, Brody proposes the _______ standard.

A) legal
B) bureaucratic
C) full disclosure
D) transparency
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
45
The Following Questions For Readings: Canterbury v. Spence, U.S. Court of Appeals
-In the Canterbury ruling, the court said the adequacy of disclosure by a physician should be judged by

A) the patient's need for relevant information.
B) the medical profession.
C) legal standards.
D) the state of medical technology.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
46
The Following Questions For Readings: Canterbury v. Spence, U.S. Court of Appeals
-In Canterbury v. Spence, the court said that the patient's right of self-decision

A) shapes the boundaries of the duty to treat.
B) shapes the boundaries of the duty to reveal.
C) dictates what the physician can and cannot say.
D) shapes the boundaries of medical practice.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
فتح الحزمة
k this deck
47
The Following Questions For Readings: Canterbury v. Spence, U.S. Court of Appeals
-In Canterbury v. Spence, the court declared that the topics importantly demanding communication of information include the

A) costs of the treatment.
B) inherent and potential hazards of the proposed treatment.
C) physician's formal education.
D) inherent hazards of following the physician's advice.
فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.
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فتح الحزمة
افتح القفل للوصول البطاقات البالغ عددها 47 في هذه المجموعة.