Consent for Medical Treatment: What is ‘Reasonable’?

Author:

Sarela Abeezar IsmailORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe General Medical Council (GMC) instructs doctors to act ‘reasonably’ in obtaining consent from patients. However, the GMC does not explain what it means to be reasonable: it is left to doctors to figure out the substance of this instruction. The GMC relies on the Supreme Court’s judgment inMontgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board; and it can be assumed that the judges’ idea of reasonability is adopted. The aim of this paper is to flesh out this idea of reasonability. This idea is commonly personified as the audience that has to be satisfied by the doctor’s justification for offering, or withholding, certain treatments and related information. In case law, this audience shifted from a reasonable doctor to a ‘reasonable person in the patient’s position’; andMontgomeryexpands the audience to include ‘particular’ patients, too. Senior judges have clarified that the reasonable person is a normative ideal, and not a sociological construct; but they do not set out the characteristics of this ideal. John Rawls has conceived the reasonable person-ideal as one that pursues fair terms of co-operation with other members of society. An alternative ideal can be inferred from the feminist ethic of care. However, the reasonable patient fromMontgomerydoes not align with either theoretical ideal; but, instead, is an entirely rational being. Such a conception conflicts with both real-life constraints on rationality and the doctor’s duty to care for the patient, and it challenges the practice of medicine.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Policy,Health (social science),Issues, ethics and legal aspects

Reference49 articles.

1. National Health Service Resolution (2022). Faculty of learning. Learning module: Consent. Retrieved February 22, 2022, from https://resolution.nhs.uk/resource-fol-module/consent/.

2. National Health Service Resolution (2022). Faculty of learning resource: Read the benefits of supported decision making (consent). Retrieved February 22, 2022, from https://resolution.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/Did-you-know-The-benefits-of-supported-decision-making-consent-WEB.pdf.

3. National Health Service Resolution (2022). Our refereshed 2019–2022 strategic plan: Delivering fair resolution and learning from harm. Retrieved February 22, 2022, from https://resolution.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Our-refreshed-2019-2022-strategic-plan.pdf.

4. General Medical Council (2020). Decision making and consent. Retrieved February 1, 2022, from https://www.gmc-uk.org/ethical-guidance/ethical-guidance-for-doctors/decision-making-and-consent.

5. Sarela, A. I. (2022). Does the general medical council’s 2020 guidance on consent advance on its 2008 guidance? Journal of Medical Ethics. https://doi.org/10.1136/medethics-2021-107347.

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