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Doctors Should Now Seek Consent Of Patient Before Any Treatment

by Medindia Content Team on Jan 17 2008 12:49 PM

The Delhi Supreme Court has held that a doctor needs to seek and secure the consent of the patient before commencing a ‘treatment’ including surgery. This is not all. No part of the body can be removed without his/her consent, the Supreme Court also ruled on Wednesday.

A three-Judge Bench comprising Justice B.N. Agrawal, Justice P.P. Naolekar and Justice R.V. Raveendran  were quoted:  “The consent so obtained should be real and valid; the patient should have the capacity and competence to consent; his consent should be voluntary; and his consent should be on the basis of adequate information concerning the nature of the treatment procedure, so that he knows what he is consenting to.”

This ruling comes in the wake of an order passed by the National Consumer Disputes Redress Commission rejecting the complaint of a 44-year-old woman, Samira Kohli. Kohli   alleged that the respondent, Dr. Prabha Manchanda, had removed her uterus, ovaries and fallopian tubes in May 1995.

Writing the judgment, Justice Raveendran further added : “the doctor should disclose the nature and procedure of the treatment and its purpose, benefits and effect; alternatives if any available; an outline of the substantial risks; and adverse consequences of refusing treatment. But there is no need to explain remote or theoretical risks involved, which may frighten or confuse a patient and result in refusal of consent for the necessary treatment.” The Bench has also ruled that  consent given only for a diagnostic procedure could not be considered as consent for therapeutic treatment. “Consent given for a specific treatment procedure will not be valid for conducting some other treatment procedure. The fact that the unauthorized additional surgery is beneficial to the patient, or that it would save considerable time and expense to the patient, or would relieve the patient from pain and suffering in future, are not grounds of defense in an action in tort for negligence or assault and battery”, the court heard.

Emphasizing the need for the government to provide better medical and health care, the Bench was also quoted:“there is a general perception among the middle class public that private hospitals and doctors prescribe avoidable costly diagnostic procedures and medicines, and subject them to unwanted surgical procedures, for financial gain.” It added:  “the public feel that many doctors who have spent a crore or more for becoming a specialist, or nursing homes which have invested several crores on diagnostic and infrastructure facilities, would necessarily operate with a purely commercial and not service motive; that such doctors and hospitals would advise extensive costly treatment procedures and surgeries, where conservative or simple treatment may meet the need; and that what used to be a noble service oriented profession is slowly but steadily converting into a purely business.”

In the Kohli case, the Bench held that there was no consent by the appellant for performing hysterectomy . It also held that the performance of such surgery was an unauthorized invasion and interference with appellant’s body. This, it ruled, amounted to a tortuous act of assault and battery and therefore displayed a deficiency in service



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