Informed Consent
Informed consent is the process by which a patient, having received and understood relevant information, voluntarily authorizes a medical intervention or participation in research. It is both an ethical principle grounded in respect for patient autonomy and a practical communication task in clinical care.
Definition
Informed consent is a voluntary, informed authorization of a medical intervention or research participation by a patient (or authorized surrogate) who has adequate decision-making capacity and has received the disclosure needed to make the decision.
Scope
This topic covers the elements and ethical foundations of informed consent, the assessment of decision-making capacity, and the standards for disclosure. It is framed as a communication and ethics topic for reference and education, and does not provide legal advice or institution-specific consent procedures.
Core questions
- What are the necessary elements of valid informed consent?
- How is decision-making capacity assessed and distinguished from legal competence?
- What standard governs how much information must be disclosed?
- How do consent and shared decision-making relate?
Key concepts
- Disclosure
- Understanding
- Voluntariness
- Decision-making capacity
- Surrogate decision-making
- Reasonable-person standard
Key theories
- Autonomy-based account of consent
- Faden and Beauchamp ground informed consent in respect for autonomous choice, analyzing it in terms of disclosure, understanding, voluntariness, competence, and authorization rather than mere signed forms.
Mechanisms
Valid consent is typically analyzed into components: the patient has decision-making capacity, receives adequate disclosure of the nature, risks, benefits, and alternatives of the intervention, understands that information, decides voluntarily without coercion, and authorizes the action. Capacity is generally assessed through a patient's ability to communicate a choice, understand relevant information, appreciate its significance to their situation, and reason about options. These functional abilities, rather than a diagnosis, determine capacity.
Clinical relevance
Informed consent is required for most non-emergency interventions and underlies the ethical conduct of clinical research. This entry describes the consent process and the framework for assessing capacity; it characterizes ethical and communicative standards and is not legal guidance or a substitute for jurisdiction-specific requirements.
Evidence & guidelines
Informed consent is codified in research-ethics frameworks and professional and legal standards across jurisdictions, with disclosure standards varying between professional-practice and reasonable-person formulations. Clinical literature emphasizes that valid consent is a communication process rather than a signature, and that capacity assessment should be decision-specific.
History
The modern doctrine of informed consent developed through twentieth-century law and bioethics, shaped by court decisions on disclosure and by research scandals that prompted codes such as the Nuremberg Code and the Declaration of Helsinki. Faden and Beauchamp's 1986 history and theory provided an influential philosophical analysis, and capacity assessment was later operationalized in clinical and forensic practice.
Debates
- Which disclosure standard should govern consent?
- Jurisdictions differ between a professional-practice standard (what a reasonable clinician would disclose) and a reasonable-person or subjective standard (what a reasonable patient would want to know), with implications for how much information must be shared.
Key figures
- Ruth Faden
- Tom Beauchamp
- James Childress
- Paul Appelbaum
Related topics
Seminal works
- faden-beauchamp-1986
- appelbaum-2007
- beauchamp-childress-2019
Frequently asked questions
- Is a signed consent form the same as informed consent?
- No. A signature documents the process, but valid informed consent depends on the patient having capacity, receiving adequate disclosure, understanding it, and deciding voluntarily; the form alone does not establish these.
- What is the difference between capacity and competence?
- Capacity is a clinical, decision-specific judgment about a patient's functional ability to make a particular decision, while competence is generally a legal determination; the two are related but not identical.