Attitudes and Practices on the Consent Process and Decision-making for Intravenous Stroke Thrombolysis: Physicians' Perspective

Earlier treatment with intravenous stroke thrombolysis improves outcomes and lowers risk of bleeding complications. The decision-making and consent process is one of the rate-limiting steps in the duration between hospital arrival and treatment initiation. We aim to describe the attitudes and practi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore Singapore, 2013-11, Vol.42 (11), p.567-574
Hauptverfasser: Talabucon, Loreto P, Menon, Sumytra, Toh, April J, Oh, Daniel C T, De Silva, Deidre Anne
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container_end_page 574
container_issue 11
container_start_page 567
container_title Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore
container_volume 42
creator Talabucon, Loreto P
Menon, Sumytra
Toh, April J
Oh, Daniel C T
De Silva, Deidre Anne
description Earlier treatment with intravenous stroke thrombolysis improves outcomes and lowers risk of bleeding complications. The decision-making and consent process is one of the rate-limiting steps in the duration between hospital arrival and treatment initiation. We aim to describe the attitudes and practices of neurologists in Singapore on the consent and decision-making processes for stroke thrombolysis. A survey of neurologists and neurologists-in-training in 2 large tertiary public hospitals in Singapore was conducted. Among 46 respondents, 94% of them considered stroke thrombolysis an emergency treatment and 67% of them indicated there is a need for written informed consent. The majority (87%) knew that from a legal perspective, the doctor should be the decision-maker in an emergency treatment for a mentally incapacitated patient. However, 63% of respondents reported that it is the next-of-kin who usually makes the decision in actual practice. If confronted with a mentally incapacitated stroke patient, 57% of them were willing to be the proxy decision-maker and 13% of them were not. In 3 commonly encountered vignettes when a mentally incapacitated patient was being considered for stroke thrombolysis, there was no clear consensus on the respondents' practices. The next-of-kin is usually the decision-maker for stroke thrombolysis in practice for a mentally incapacitated patient despite most doctors considering thrombolysis an emergency treatment. This, together with the lack of consensus and variance in decision-making and consent practice amongst neurologists for stroke thrombolysis, demonstrates the need to develop best practice guidelines to standardise healthcare practices for greater consistency in health service delivery.
doi_str_mv 10.47102/annals-acadmedsg.V42N11p567
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subjects Attitude
Decision Making
Humans
Informed Consent - legislation & jurisprudence
Physicians
Stroke
title Attitudes and Practices on the Consent Process and Decision-making for Intravenous Stroke Thrombolysis: Physicians' Perspective
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