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Informed Consent In Canada

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The Canadian RN’s role in informed consent to treatment procedure Introduction. Informed consent stands for self-determination and respect for autonomy. Autonomy is the most influential ethical principle and the main focal point in health care. It is a major concept in relation to informed consent and its simplest form can be seen as the patient’s right to determine what will or will not be done to his or her body. Expanding societal values and evolving patient centred healthcare system influences nursing practice greatly. In Canada, physicians are legally responsible for obtaining informed consent but nurses are also involved in every aspect of the informed consent process. For e.g. Nurses can perform this role when they notice that patients …show more content…

It is best demonstrated when patients signs for proposed treatment once they feel fully informed and completely understand what a treatment or procedure entails. The idea of informed consent is based on the principle of autonomy and respect of self-determination. In this paper I am going to present different perspectives of informed consent by different institutions that why it is important to treatment procedure. Canadian health care consent act, (1996) says that, there is no treatment without informed consent and it must be related to the proposed treatment, it must be given voluntarily and must not be obtained through misrepresentation or fraud. There is a different provision for a person who is deemed incapable to give consent. If a person is not competent to give consent, it may be given or refused on his/her behalf by a substitute decision maker. There is no specific age for children to give consent in Ontario but health care providers must assess the decision-making capacity of a child before proceeding with the treatment. There is exclusion too i.e. when informed consent is not mandatory. In an emergency situation informed consent could be withheld, where the person is experiencing severe suffering or he/she is at risk of life, if the treatment is not administered promptly and if there is no substitute decision maker to make decision on behalf of the patient. (HCCA, …show more content…

Nurses are always the front line care giver of patients. A review of literature of nursing ethics about informed consent has been performed. It strongly demonstrates the importance of informed consent and that nurses are the key players for the advocacy role to protect the patient’s right. In Canada informed consent has been exercising in a broad way and to enforce this action College of Nurses states that; nurses are accountable for obtaining informed consent. The most important part of the consent process is informing the client. It is useless to get the client’s signature, if the client is not well informed and made fully understood. In practice, nurses are only witnessing the consent and they are not verifying if the informed consent was taken. (CNO, 2013). Similarly, Canadian Nurses Association, (2009), further emphasizes the value of informed consent by promoting and respecting informed decision making. It is one of the ethical responsibilities of Canadian registered nurses. Nurses can play a vital role on behalf of their clients in obtaining informed consent process as a resource person, a co-ordinator or a facilitator to support their client to make an informed decision making. (CNA,

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