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MINNEAPOLIS -- Picture this: A patient with cancer wants to get better and needs your help. But he or she refuses to hear the prognosis or understand the treatment options. The patient, in essence, has embraced a personal don’t-ask, don’t-tell policy.
What should you do as a medical professional? Get help from a psychologist and consider the ethics of the situation, advised a VA psychologist in a presentation at the September 2019 annual meeting of the Association of VA Hematology/Oncology.
Alyssa Ford, PhD, psychosocial oncology coordinator at VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System in Pennsylvania, said she has faced this situation. “We didn’t know the staging yet, but the veteran did not want to know about their prognosis or the treatment options,” she recalled. “They just wanted to fight this cancer.”
At issue in this case, she said, is this question: “What do we do when a patient opts out about receiving sufficient information to make an informed choice?”
As she explained, the key is to understand the person’s capacity—the ability to make an informed decision. “It can be assessed by any licensed health care provider who understands the components of capacity and is able to assess them.”
Ford evaluates a patient’s capacity by analyzing whether he or she can perform 4 tasks: Make decisions, live independently, manage finances, and grant power of attorney. “Often,” she said, “they have 1 but not all.”
Other components of capacity include the ability to understand one’s medical situation, an appreciation of the pros and cons of treatment options, the consistency of choices over time, and the ability to reason. “Can the patient consider the risks and benefits of each option and consider quality of life vs quantity of life in light of their own cultural identity and personal values?”
Keep in mind that levels of capacity can change over time, Ford said, and remember that these judgements are not arbitrary or punitive.
When someone doesn’t have capacity, she said, “it doesn’t necessarily tell us why or whether it will come back. But it does say they can’t provide informed consent.”
What happened to the determinedly reluctant patient who simply wanted to “fight” and not make decisions?
“The oncology provider chose to have the psychology provider in the room while staging information and prognosis was shared,” Ford said in an interview following her presentation. “And the psychology provider assisted with ensuring that the veteran received education in simple terms and in promoting active coping.”
In addition, she said, “the psychologist provider also spent several minutes after the visit giving the veteran an opportunity to discuss their feelings. And the provider physically escorted the veteran to the laboratory to ensure that the impact of receiving difficult news did not impair mood or cognition to the point that the veteran left the medical center instead of engaging in the next step of needed medical care.”
Ford reports no relevant disclosures.
MINNEAPOLIS -- Picture this: A patient with cancer wants to get better and needs your help. But he or she refuses to hear the prognosis or understand the treatment options. The patient, in essence, has embraced a personal don’t-ask, don’t-tell policy.
What should you do as a medical professional? Get help from a psychologist and consider the ethics of the situation, advised a VA psychologist in a presentation at the September 2019 annual meeting of the Association of VA Hematology/Oncology.
Alyssa Ford, PhD, psychosocial oncology coordinator at VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System in Pennsylvania, said she has faced this situation. “We didn’t know the staging yet, but the veteran did not want to know about their prognosis or the treatment options,” she recalled. “They just wanted to fight this cancer.”
At issue in this case, she said, is this question: “What do we do when a patient opts out about receiving sufficient information to make an informed choice?”
As she explained, the key is to understand the person’s capacity—the ability to make an informed decision. “It can be assessed by any licensed health care provider who understands the components of capacity and is able to assess them.”
Ford evaluates a patient’s capacity by analyzing whether he or she can perform 4 tasks: Make decisions, live independently, manage finances, and grant power of attorney. “Often,” she said, “they have 1 but not all.”
Other components of capacity include the ability to understand one’s medical situation, an appreciation of the pros and cons of treatment options, the consistency of choices over time, and the ability to reason. “Can the patient consider the risks and benefits of each option and consider quality of life vs quantity of life in light of their own cultural identity and personal values?”
Keep in mind that levels of capacity can change over time, Ford said, and remember that these judgements are not arbitrary or punitive.
When someone doesn’t have capacity, she said, “it doesn’t necessarily tell us why or whether it will come back. But it does say they can’t provide informed consent.”
What happened to the determinedly reluctant patient who simply wanted to “fight” and not make decisions?
“The oncology provider chose to have the psychology provider in the room while staging information and prognosis was shared,” Ford said in an interview following her presentation. “And the psychology provider assisted with ensuring that the veteran received education in simple terms and in promoting active coping.”
In addition, she said, “the psychologist provider also spent several minutes after the visit giving the veteran an opportunity to discuss their feelings. And the provider physically escorted the veteran to the laboratory to ensure that the impact of receiving difficult news did not impair mood or cognition to the point that the veteran left the medical center instead of engaging in the next step of needed medical care.”
Ford reports no relevant disclosures.
MINNEAPOLIS -- Picture this: A patient with cancer wants to get better and needs your help. But he or she refuses to hear the prognosis or understand the treatment options. The patient, in essence, has embraced a personal don’t-ask, don’t-tell policy.
What should you do as a medical professional? Get help from a psychologist and consider the ethics of the situation, advised a VA psychologist in a presentation at the September 2019 annual meeting of the Association of VA Hematology/Oncology.
Alyssa Ford, PhD, psychosocial oncology coordinator at VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System in Pennsylvania, said she has faced this situation. “We didn’t know the staging yet, but the veteran did not want to know about their prognosis or the treatment options,” she recalled. “They just wanted to fight this cancer.”
At issue in this case, she said, is this question: “What do we do when a patient opts out about receiving sufficient information to make an informed choice?”
As she explained, the key is to understand the person’s capacity—the ability to make an informed decision. “It can be assessed by any licensed health care provider who understands the components of capacity and is able to assess them.”
Ford evaluates a patient’s capacity by analyzing whether he or she can perform 4 tasks: Make decisions, live independently, manage finances, and grant power of attorney. “Often,” she said, “they have 1 but not all.”
Other components of capacity include the ability to understand one’s medical situation, an appreciation of the pros and cons of treatment options, the consistency of choices over time, and the ability to reason. “Can the patient consider the risks and benefits of each option and consider quality of life vs quantity of life in light of their own cultural identity and personal values?”
Keep in mind that levels of capacity can change over time, Ford said, and remember that these judgements are not arbitrary or punitive.
When someone doesn’t have capacity, she said, “it doesn’t necessarily tell us why or whether it will come back. But it does say they can’t provide informed consent.”
What happened to the determinedly reluctant patient who simply wanted to “fight” and not make decisions?
“The oncology provider chose to have the psychology provider in the room while staging information and prognosis was shared,” Ford said in an interview following her presentation. “And the psychology provider assisted with ensuring that the veteran received education in simple terms and in promoting active coping.”
In addition, she said, “the psychologist provider also spent several minutes after the visit giving the veteran an opportunity to discuss their feelings. And the provider physically escorted the veteran to the laboratory to ensure that the impact of receiving difficult news did not impair mood or cognition to the point that the veteran left the medical center instead of engaging in the next step of needed medical care.”
Ford reports no relevant disclosures.