Prepared for:
大象视频
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
540 Gaither Road
Rockville, MD 20850
www.ahrq.gov
Contract No. HHSA290201000031I, TO #3
Prepared by:
Sarah J. Shoemaker, Ph.D., Pharm.D.
Abt Associates, Inc.
Cindy Brach, M.P.P.
大象视频
大象视频Publication No. 17-0016-1-EF
January 2017
Contents
Introduction
About This Guide
About The Training Modules
Who Is This Guide For?
Organization of the Guide
Why Improve Informed Consent?
Getting Started
Where to Begin?
Determining Readiness
Quick Starts
Implementing the Leaders Module
Articulate a Vision
Recruit Change Leads, Executive Sponsors, and Change Team Members
Assess Existing Informed Consent Policies and Practices
Select Your Strategies
Phase In Implementation
Take Advantage of Implementation Guidance
Define Measurable Objectives, Monitor, and Report
Implementing the Health Care Professionals (HCP) Module
Identify Champions
Engage Staff
Target Key Trainees
Encourage Participation
Select Your Strategies
Follow These Implementation Tips
Reinforce the Training
Think Creatively
Define Measurable Objectives and Monitor Unit Improvements
Troubleshooting Implementation Challenges
References
Appendix A: Patient Survey to Assess Informed Consent 鈥 English Version
Appendix B: Patient Survey to Assess Informed Consent 鈥 Spanish Version
Appendix C: Health Care Professional Survey to Assess Informed Consent
Introduction
About This Guide
This guide is a companion to the 大象视频training modules: Making Informed Consent an Informed Choice: Training for Health Care Leaders (Leaders Module) and Making Informed Consent an Informed Choice: Training for Health Care Professionals (HCP Module). It provides guidance for implementing the training modules using a quality improvement (QI) approach. This guide offers ideas and suggestions for overcoming challenges in getting staff to take the modules and for putting the recommended improvement strategies into practice smoothly. The guidance is based on the implementation experiences of four hospitals that participated in a pilot test of these training modules, and on the experiences of other hospitals implementing quality improvements. Start by viewing the training modules. Viewing these modules will mark the beginning of your effort to improve informed consent.
About The Training Modules
The Leaders Module addresses improvements that can be made on the hospital level. The HCP Module addresses strategies that clinical teams can use to help patients make informed choices. Both modules cover the principles of informed consent, including patients' rights, legal and patient safety implications, and patients' capacity for decisionmaking. Each module can be taken for free continuing education credits on the Joint Commission's learning management system (LMS) for hospitals accredited by The Joint Commission1. Hospitals can also host the modules on their own learning management systems2. For PDFs of module screenshots and audio scripts visit AHRQ's Making Informed Consent an Informed Choice: Training Modules for Health Care Leaders and Professionals.
Key Elements of Leaders Module
Key Elements of Health Care Professionals Module
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Who Is This Guide For?
This guide is primarily for two audiences. The first is any individual or team that is charged with making hospital-wide improvements to how consent for tests, treatments, and procedures is obtained. Anyone asked to lead improvements to informed consent policies鈥攕uch as staff from departments of patient safety, accreditation, or compliance; hospital leadership; nursing leaders or educators; physician leadership (e.g., chiefs or chairs of specific hospital units/areas)鈥攎ay find this guide helpful. The second audience is leaders of hospital units who want to make improvements to informed consent processes, even if there is no hospital-wide initiative. Additionally, this guide may also be helpful to community clinics and office-based practices, especially large clinical groups, seeking to improve informed consent.
Pilot hospitals reported that the modules were very helpful in gaining consensus around the need to improve informed consent policies and practices. Reactions to the modules included:
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Organization of the Guide
This guide begins by explaining why improving informed consent is important. It then describes how to get started and briefly discusses how you might determine whether your hospital is ready to engage in informed consent improvement. The guide is then divided into two sections that correspond to the two training modules:
- Implementing the Leaders Module鈥this section takes you through the process of launching and implementing strategies from the Leaders Module, from creating a vision to measuring implementation.
- Implementing the Health Care Professionals (HCP) Module鈥this section contains guidance on implementing any of the 10 strategies in the HCP Module, including tips on identifying champions and engaging staff.
The guide concludes with Appendices, consisting of survey tools (i.e., a survey of patients and healthcare professionals to assess your hospital's informed consent practices) that you might use to support your implementation efforts.
Why Improve Informed Consent?
Patients and health care teams alike benefit when a patient's consent to treatment is fully informed as the result of a clear, comprehensive, and engaging communication process. Unfortunately, there are many problems with the informed consent process in hospitals today. Both clinicians and patients often treat informed consent as a formality鈥攁n obstacle on the way to care. As a result, many patients do not understand basic information about the benefits, harms, and risks of their proposed treatment, including the possibility of poor outcomes, even after signing a consent form. Some patients also may not understand their rights, including that they can say "no" to any treatment.
A high-quality process of informed consent has many advantages. Here are some messages you might use to communicate why your hospital would want to make it a priority to improve informed consent.
- It's a patient safety issue.
- It is a medical error if patients are given care they would not have chosen if they had understood what it entailed and what their options were.
- It's a liability issue.
- Failure to obtain informed consent can be considered negligence, battery, or malpractice by a court of law.
- Problems with informed consent are among the top 10 reasons for medical malpractice suits. When patients and their families understand the benefits, harms, and risks of treatment in advance, they can better cope with any poor outcomes that may happen as a result of treatment and may be less likely to sue.
- It's a patient-centered care issue.
- Patient-centered care requires an informed consent process that is respectful of patients' right to choose.
- When patients make informed choices, it strengthens the therapeutic relationship, and can improve followup and aftercare.
- It's a financial issue.
- Improving informed consent could increase Hospital CAHPS庐 scores and payments based on them.
- Improving informed consent can reduce payouts when settling malpractice claims.
Why Improve Informed Consent in Your Hospital? |__| Your patients often do not understand what they have consented to even after signing the form. |__| Your patients are not making informed choices. |__| You are at risk of malpractice lawsuits related to informed consent. |__| Your hospital had a Joint Commission accreditation finding related to informed consent. |__| Your hospital's periodic audits revealed incomplete documentation. |__| Your hospital's policy is imprecise. |__| Your hospital's consent forms are long and confusing. |__| Qualified interpreter services are not always available or used with patients with limited English proficiency. |
Getting Started
An initiative to make informed consent an informed choice can be launched in a variety of ways. You may be wondering who should take which module when, whether your hospital is equipped to make improvements to informed consent at the present time, or whether you can make some rapid improvements without launching a full blown QI initiative. The sections in this chapter can help you begin.
Where to Begin?
Has your hospital already decided to improve informed consent? If your hospital has already committed to informed consent improvement, we recommend that the leadership of your hospital take the Leaders Module; designate one or more change leads to direct an assessment of the hospital's policies, supportive systems, and workflow; and form a change team to develop and implement a Hospital Level Action Plan.
Are you a hospital leader who recognizes the opportunities to improve informed consent and wants to address policy, forms, decision aids, or supports (e.g., language assistance)? Start by taking the Leader's Module yourself. Then choose a staff member to take the Leader's Module and have that person assess current policy and practice. These findings can be brought to other members of the leadership team and be used to identify problems with the status quo. Once you reach consensus that change is needed, encourage others to take the Leaders Module. Then you're ready to designate a change lead and embark on the change process.
Are you a hospital leader who makes decisions about training health care professionals? Although ideally improvements will be made at the hospital level first, the HCP Module can be used independently of the Leaders Module. You can direct staff to take the HCP module, which covers a variety of strategies to improve their communication and patient engagement skills, as well as documentation and team processes around informed consent. Hospital leadership can make decisions about which of the strategies they want clinical teams to learn and implement, or they can leave these decisions to the units themselves.
Are you the head of a department or unit and want to make improvements to informed consent? Even if there is no hospital-wide QI initiative, you can use this guide and the HCP Module to implement improvements in communication, presenting choices, and team processes in your area. Take the HCP modules and decide whether you want to direct your department or unit to implement particular strategies or whether to let your department or unit decide which strategies to pursue. In either case, you will need to be figure out how to implement the strategies so they work in your department or unit.
Determining Readiness
Improving informed consent is similar to other hospital QI efforts. QI efforts often are derailed because organizations were not ready for them. Organizational readiness for change can be defined as 鈥渢he extent to which organizational members are psychologically and behaviorally prepared to implement鈥 a new evidence-based practice or intervention(s).2 Readiness can be understood as 1) motivation鈥攖he willingness and commitment of the hospital to implement improvements to informed consent, and 2) capability鈥攖he staff's perceived ability to institute change or, alternatively, the degree to which individual staff feel they can be effective in implementing the informed consent strategies.3,4
In the adjacent box we provide a readiness assessment checklist to help you start thinking about whether an informed consent QI initiative is likely to succeed at this time at your hospital. Some of the checklist items were used to assess readiness when selecting hospitals for the pilot test of the training modules. Other items were drawn from a guide for deciding about whether to adopt innovations.5 (Note: this readiness checklist has not been formally validated.)
Checklist to Assess Hospital Readiness |__| Does your hospital have a strong rationale for improving informed consent? |__| Does improving informed consent further your hospital's goals? |__| Is improving informed consent with these training modules compatible with your hospital's mission, values, and culture? |__| What are the potential costs, benefits, and risks of improving informed consent鈥攁nd of not improving informed consent? |__| Will hospital leadership support the training and improvements? |__| Are there other competing initiatives or changes that will interfere? |__| How will staff and other stakeholders react to this change? |__| Will your hospital be able to reinforce and/or reward progress? |__| Does your hospital have experience with quality improvement and change management? |__| Does your hospital have the necessary infrastructure to monitor improvements? |
Hospital readiness is not a constant. A hospital might not be ready at a given time鈥攆or example, because a new electronic health record system is being rolled out鈥攂ut may then be ready a year later.
You can also work to make your hospital ready for informed consent QI. For example, leadership support is critical to virtually any QI undertaking. Effective approaches to secure and retain leadership support include aligning the change effort with organizational goals, and keeping leadership involved and informed throughout implementation.6 Resources in the Leader's module, such as the Championing Change presentation and the Practical Guide to Improving Informed Consent,7 provide guidance in getting leadership buy in.
Quick Starts
If your hospital is not yet ready for a comprehensive QI initiative to shift from informed consent to informed choice, you can still make progress. Review the two Quick Start alternatives below and get started.
Quick Start for Hospital-Level Improvement
- Take the Leaders Module.
- Choose one area for improvement.
- Assemble a work group to develop an improvement plan.
- Test and refine an improvement, for example:
- Clarify an ambiguity in your informed consent policy.
- Improve an informed consent form for one test, treatment, or procedure.
- Assess decision aids used by one department and replace low-quality ones.
- Arrange for telephone and/or video interpreters for languages not spoken by in-house interpreters and bilingual staff.
- Require informed consent documentation prior to scheduling surgical procedures.
Quick Start for Unit-Level Improvement
- Take the HCP Module.
- Choose one area for improvement.
- Assemble a work group to develop an improvement plan.
- Test and refine an improvement, for example:
- Coach clinicians to use plain language.
- Incorporate teach-back into the informed consent discussion.
- Ensure all staff know when and how to call for interpreter services and where equipment for telephone and video interpretation is kept.
- Create an inventory and sign-out sheet for educational and decision aids.
- Institute a check that all patients have been offered options and understand they have the choice to refuse treatment.
Once you've completed a Quick Start improvement, try to leverage your accomplishments. You can:
- Expand on or spread your initial improvement,
- Choose another area for improvement, or
- Re-assess your hospital's readiness to embark on a QI initiative to improve informed consent.
Implementing the Leaders Module
Articulate a Vision
Making informed consent an informed choice has to resonate with staff and feel consistent with the hospital鈥檚 core values. You will want to articulate a vision that aligns with your mission and strategic goals. For example, if your hospital prides itself on being patient-centered, you can integrate the initiative to improve informed consent into efforts to be patient-centered. If, on the other hand, your hospital has made patient safety its number one priority, then the vision for the improvement initiative could emphasize avoiding errors that occur when tests or procedures are performed on patients who, had they understood their choices, would not have consented. For more information on creating a vision, see the Championing Change presentation in the Leaders Module.
Example of a vision statement for making informed consent an informed choice At our hospital:
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Recruit Change Leads, Executive Sponsors, and Change Team Members
A critical step in rolling out the training modules and making informed consent an informed choice is to identify a change lead. This person will serve as the point person and drive progress. The change lead should have the "authority, expertise, credibility, and motivation necessary to drive a successful initiative."8 Choose a change lead who can strike a balance between having enough time to expend on the initiative and having the authority to propel implementation. Junior staff may have enthusiasm and time to spend on the initiative, but may garner less respect and lack the clout needed to counter resistance.
One way of lending authority and respect to the change lead is to have executive sponsors of the initiative. Executive sponsors communicate to hospital staff the importance of the initiative and meet regularly with the change lead to get progress reports. Having more than one executive sponsor can be helpful in reinforcing the message that this is a hospital-wide issue, and can protect against disruption should there be turnover in staff.
The change lead could come from a variety of departments, including: accreditation or compliance, patient safety, quality, physician or nursing leadership, patient education, or elsewhere. Table 1 provides some observations on the strengths and weaknesses of change leads from different parts of the hospital. Recruiting two complementary co-leads is an attractive option as the strengths of one co-lead could compensate for the weaknesses of the other. Like having more than one executive sponsor, having co-leads provides a hedge against implementation interruption in the event a change lead departs or transfers to another role in the organization.
Table 1. Strengths and weaknesses of change lead affiliation
Change lead's affiliation | Strength | Weakness |
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Accreditation and compliance | Commensurate with role, driven by accreditation standards, seen accreditation review findings | Possible perception from HCP staff: limited on-the-ground understanding of IC practices |
Nursing Leadership | Patient education expertise, influence over nursing staff | No oversight of clinicians responsible for obtaining informed consent |
Physician Leadership | Influence on clinicians responsible for obtaining informed consent, could introduce in grand rounds and staff meetings (e.g., surgery) | Very limited available time, competing priorities |
Quality or Safety | Experience in QI and change management | Possible perception from HCP staff: limited on-the-ground understanding of IC practices |
Patient Education | Expertise in improving written and spoken communication | No oversight of clinicians responsible for obtaining informed consent |
Note: IC = informed consent
One or two people cannot manage a hospital-wide initiative on their own. Executive sponsors and change leads should recruit a strong change team鈥攁 group of individuals who will help roll out the training modules and implement the selected strategies from the training. Consider including representatives from the affected departments (e.g., compliance, accreditation, patient safety, quality, interpreter services, information technology), as well as representatives from the clinical units and different types of staff (e.g., nurses, physicians, residents, nurse educators, interpreters). Having physicians who either have direct lines of authority or hold a lot of sway with their colleagues will be important in achieving improvements in the informed consent discussion.
Executive sponsors and all members of the change team should take both the Leaders Module and the HCP Module. Additional leaders, especially with those whose staff are participating on the change team, may also benefit from taking both training modules. is offering continuing education credit for completion of the modules on their LMS. You can also host the modules on your own LMS.
Assess Existing Informed Consent Policies and Practices
Your hospital should use your hospital鈥檚 existing data sources or collect new information to understand what your current informed consent policies are, how well they are being followed, the workflow for the informed consent process and documentation, and the extent to which patients are making informed choices. The assessment results are intended to help your hospital identify opportunities for improvement and potentially set your goals for improvement.
It is important to collect data from multiple sources, since not everyone will share the same perspective. For example, leaders may assume that patient capacity to consent is always assessed, whereas staff may report that there are instances where it is not. Table 2 shows potential sources of information.
Table 2. Assessment Data Sources
Review Existing Data | Collect New Data |
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Accreditation review findings | Chart audit data3 |
Patient experience surveys data on how easy doctors were to understand4 | Assessments of patient understanding of forms5 |
Malpractice claims and payout data | Inventory and assessments of decision aids and other patient education materials used in informed consent discussions |
Compliance review data | Survey data6 |
Interpreter services data | Interview data on familiarity and adherence to your hospital鈥檚 policies, stories of communication failures, and effective approaches |
Data on patient safety events and their impact (e.g., near miss, harm caused).7 | Patient reports of safety events |
Table 3 provides examples of assessment findings from the pilot test hospitals that identified opportunities to improve informed consent.
Table 3. Examples of assessment findings from pilot test hospitals
Area | Opportunities for Improvement |
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Policy |
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Forms |
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Compliance and Workflow |
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Communication Supports |
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Select Your Strategies
Based on the results from the assessment described in the previous section, you can select the strategies that your hospital will pursue. It is likely that there will be multiple opportunities for moving your hospital toward making informed consent an informed choice, so avoid taking on more than you can reasonably handle at one time. Overly ambitious QI initiatives can collapse under their own weight.
Consider prioritizing the improvements, starting with one strategy. You may want to start with a strategy that you think you can make quick progress to score an early win. Or you may want tackle a strategy that clearly aligns with other efforts within your hospital, like improving patient and family engagement or surgical patient safety. If you want to push forward on multiple fronts, make sure each implementation team is adequately staffed and there is a plan for how and when staff will pursue each strategy.
Underscore the Importance of Patient Understanding A rallying cry for your improvement effort could be that patients should understand what they are consenting to. As the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services say in the guidelines hospital surveyors use to determine whether a hospital has met Medicare and Medicaid's Conditions of Participation standards, "Informed consent requires that a patient have a full understanding of that to which he or she has consented. An authorization from a patient who does not understand what he/she is consenting to is not informed consent." |
Phase In Implementation
The improvements or strategies you select (e.g., use of new forms or improved workflows, accessing interpreter services and other communication aids) do not need to be rolled out hospital-wide, or even across multiple units, simultaneously. Phased implementation will allow you to pass along knowledge and lessons learned from your early adopters to your subsequent implementers. Consider starting with a unit that has:
- A high volume of test, treatments, or procedures requiring informed consent,
- Already identified opportunities for improvement (e.g., accreditation review findings), and/or
- One or more strong champions for improving informed consent processes.
While each unit will have to find its own way of adapting changes to the local environment, there are obvious benefits to providing opportunities for identifying and working out the kinks early in the roll out process.
Take Advantage of Implementation Guidance
Table 4 provides the list of strategies covered in the Leaders Module and suggestions for implementing them.
Table 4. Improvement Strategies and Implementation Suggestions
Improvement Strategy | Suggestions for Implementation |
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Develop consensus around principles of informed consent |
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Write and disseminate a clear and comprehensive informed consent policy |
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Build support systems to improve the informed consent process |
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Compile a library of clear and simple informed consent forms |
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Maintain a library of high-quality decision aids and other patient education materials |
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Remove communication barriers |
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Improve workflows |
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Address staff training needs |
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For your hospital to make informed consent an informed choice, changes made at the hospital level must cascade down to the unit level. Staff need to be informed of and act on new policies, use new forms and decision aids, and avail themselves of resources to overcome communication barriers. You may find some of the topics covered in the next chapter, Implementing the Health Care Professionals Module , helpful as you activate staff to respond to the changes you have made.
Define Measurable Objectives, Monitor, and Report
A critical part of any QI effort is to develop a written action plan with clear objectives and a realistic timeline, and to use that action plan to ensure that progress can be monitored and measured. Results of interim monitoring and measurement efforts should be reported back to leadership and staff, and used to adjust the action plan where necessary or appropriate. You will want to define SMART objectives (Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Time bound)10 to track your progress toward your goals. Table 5 provides examples of SMART objectives.
Table 5: Examples of SMART objectives for hospital-level improvements
Topic | Objective |
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Process |
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Assessment |
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Policy |
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Forms and Decision Aids |
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Communication Supports |
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Workflow and Documentation |
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Training |
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You will need to determine the best method for monitoring your hospital's progress toward achieving the goals. The same data sources that informed your assessment of informed consent practice in your hospital can help you track your progress (e.g., chart audits, surveys of health care professionals and patients). You may want to track data by unit, so you know which areas in the hospital are speeding ahead and which are falling behind. Routine monthly data collection may be important for tracking progress on some goals, while spot checks might be sufficient for others.
Some goals may need to be broken down into some intermediate steps in order to monitor progress. For example, if your goal is improve the understandability of your informed consent forms, you might want to track the percentage of informed consent forms assessed, the percentage of forms revised, and the percentage of revised forms tested with diverse patients.
To ensure accountability, monitoring achievement of SMART objectives should be accompanied by reporting. Consider how frequently the Change Team, Executive Sponsors, and other hospital leadership should receive monitoring reports.
Implementing the Health Care Professionals (HCP) Module
Regardless of whether or not your hospital implements strategies from the Leaders Module, implementing strategies from the HCP Module will move your hospital closer to making informed consent an informed choice. The selection of which strategies from the HCP Module may be made by hospital leadership for hospital-wide implementation, or by leaders at the unit level for implementation within their own units. For the purposes of this section of the guide, we will assume that you are a unit leader who either has been given discretion over which strategies to implement, or are pursuing informed consent improvement in the absence of a hospital-wide initiative. The guidance in this section will help you implement the strategies presented in the HCP Module for communicating clearly, presenting choices, documenting progress, and working effectively as a team.
Identify Champions
Your first step toward implementing change should be to identify Champions to support your efforts. Champions are "individuals who dedicate themselves to supporting, marketing, and 'driving through' a [change effort],"11 and to "overcom(ing) indifference or resistance."6 Champions often strongly believe in the initiative and actively support it during implementation.6
Form an implementation team of champions to promote informed choice in your unit. You may want to recruit a variety of champions to help with different tasks, such as:
- Ensuring staff take the HCP module.
- Selecting strategies to be implemented.
- Writing a plan for implementing the selected strategies and developing SMART objectives.
- Leading implementation by modeling new behaviors and mentoring others.
- Monitoring the improvement initiative's progress.
Effective champions:
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Engage Staff
Target Key Trainees
We recommend that all clinicians who must obtain informed consent (e.g., physicians, independent physician assistants, and residents if applicable) take the entire HCP Module. This will provide them with a broad knowledge base and inform them about the full range of available strategies. Minimally, a group of senior clinicians can take the entire HCP training. This leadership team can then select which strategies to implement, and limit training for all remaining staff to the strategies that have been selected. For example, at our pilot hospitals, nursing staff whose roles do not include obtaining informed consent gave us feedback that some of the modules (e.g., Presenting Choices) did not pertain to them. Thus, you might want to consider having only nursing managers take the full module while other nursing staff skip this section.
Encourage Participation
Busy clinicians are likely to tell you that they don鈥檛 have time to take the training. Or, they may express an intention to do so but then have trouble getting around to it. You may feel like you have little leverage over clinicians who are not employees of the hospital. Be resourceful in thinking how to make it a priority for them.
- Establish a sense of urgency. For example, you could frame the initiative as being critical to accreditation review preparation.
- Appeal to their sense of professionalism. Clinicians care about their patients and often don't realize that patients don't always understand their choices.
- Point out the personal advantages. They can receive continuing education credit and potentially reduce their malpractice exposure.
- Gain consensus that there's a problem. Conduct an assessment of your unit's informed consent practices. Discuss the issues that surfaced.
- Humanize the problem. Tell a compelling story about a patient's struggle to make an informed choice. If you can't come up with a story from your unit, use one from the module.
- Use peer pressure. Post a list of who has and who hasn't taken the training module in the hallway.
- Set deadlines. Set a date by which everyone is expected to complete the module. Or ask each clinician to set his or her own deadline and then follow up on that date.
- Engage in decisionmaking. Announce a meeting at which decisions will be made about which improvement strategies to pursue and make completion of the module a prerequisite to attending the meeting.
- Negotiate. Perhaps there is something you can temporarily take off their plates to make it easier from them to take the module.
- Assign employees (e.g., hospitalists, residents) to complete the module. Monitor and enforce completion. Provide release time to complete the training. This also communicates that this is a priority activity.
What Makes Them Tick? Think about what motivates each clinician in your unit. Is he a stickler for the rules? Is he altruistic? Is she competitive? Does she dislike being told what to do? The tactic to get clinicians to take the module will likely differ depending on their personalities and positions. Malpractice as a Motivator Washington became the first state to enact legislation establishing increased legal protection to physicians whose patients sign an acknowledgement that patient decision aids were used during informed consent. |
Select Your Strategies
When choosing the topic for your initial improvement efforts, you鈥檒l want the benefits of an assessment of the informed consent practices in your unit. Please review the earlier section on Assess Existing Policy and Practice for sources of assessment data.
In addition to letting the assessment data drive your decision, the attitudes of clinicians in your unit may influence the choice. For example, if clinicians have expressed frustration when trying to communicate with patients and families who have limited English proficiency, they might be especially receptive to the strategies for removing communication barriers. Alternatively, they may have heard of teach-back from other sources and be interested in trying it in the context of informed consent. You may decide to prioritize strategies that you think will offer protection to your most vulnerable patients, or strategies that will affect the largest number of patients. Regardless of whether leadership or staff select the strategies for your unit, you'll want to take capitalize on their affinities with particular topics.
Follow These Implementation Tips
Implement Gradually
Don't make too many changes at one time. And don't feel that you have to have the entire unit implement a change for all patients at once. In QI work we talk about "small tests of change." Here are some ways you might think about gradually implementing the strategies in the HCP module:
- Ask a couple of volunteers to try a strategy.
- Ask staff to try a strategy with 1 patient a day.
- Try the strategy for only one test, treatment, or procedure.
It is important that staff learn from their tests, refine their approaches, and share what they've learned with their colleagues. Set a timetable for steadily expanding implementation until everyone has made the change with all patients.
Reinforce the Training
Taking one online training module is unlikely to result in widespread behavior change. Seek and use opportunities to reinforce the guidance provided in the training module. For example:
- Review training module content in staff meetings or in other communications with staff (e.g., email, newsletters, postings).
- Use case presentations, grand rounds, morbidity and mortality conferences, and other teaching techniques to support the strategies taught in the module.
- Present audit findings or stories from a patient safety review on informed consent.
- Present and discuss a video from the module at a Lunch and Learn session.
- Make informed choice the theme of leadership rounding.
- Provide opportunities to role play.
- Identify helpful resources in the module and share them across the unit.
- Engage members of your hospital's Patient and Family Advisory Council.
- Provide self-assessment forms for self-reflection on progress.
- Recognize staff who have mastered a strategy and invite observation.
- After rounding, huddle on ways to improve implementation of a strategy.
- At a staff meeting, ask staff how they think things are going with implementing a specific strategy and what could be done to improve it.
Think Creatively
Implementation strategies can be deceptively simple. For example, one hospital had a problem with central lines being placed without any documentation of informed consent. That changed after the central line kits were locked behind the nursing station. No one could get a central line kit without first presenting the signed consent form to a nurse.
No one has a monopoly on creative thinking. If your implementation team is stymied by a problem, open up the discussion for wider input. You could even start a contest for the best idea.
What would you do? Your unit recently got video interpretation consoles. They're great, but they're constantly being left in patients' rooms. Staff sometimes aren't bothering to chase down the consoles when they have to talk to a patient or family with limited English proficiency. How might you solve this problem? |
Define Measurable Objectives and Monitor Unit Improvements
As with any quality improvement initiative, it is important to establish SMART objectives to track progress. Table 6 contains examples of SMART objectives for each of the topics in the HCP module.
Table 6: Examples of SMART objectives for unit-level improvements
Topic | Objective |
---|---|
Assessing capacity | X percent of informed consent documentation will include documentation of the assessment of patient鈥檚 capacity to consent by [date]. |
Preparing for the discussion | X percent of patients will report the person who conducted the informed consent discussion spent enough time with them by [date]. |
Use health literacy universal precautions | X percent of patients will report that explanations of what was likely to happen and what might go wrong were easy to understand by [date]. |
Remove language barriers | X percent of informed consent documentation for patients preferring a language other than English will include documentation of use of a qualified interpreter by [date]. |
Teach-back | X percent of informed consent documentation will include documentation of asking the patient to describe his/her understanding of what would likely happen if he/she had the test, treatment, or operation by [date]. |
Offer choices | X percent of patients will report they were given options and felt free to choose any of the options by [date]. |
Engage patients, families, friends | X percent of patients will report they were encouraged to ask questions by [date]. |
Elicit goals and values | X percent of patients will report they were asked what mattered most in choosing what to do by [date]. |
Show high-quality decision aids | X percent of records of patients who underwent tests, treatments, or procedures for which a high-quality decision aid was available will include documentation of use of the aid by [date]. |
Explain benefits, harms, and risk of all options | X percent of patients will report that the description of other options was easy to understand by [date]. |
Help patients choose | X percent of patients will report that they were very satisfied with their experience discussing the options and making a decision by [date]. |
Team roles | X percent of staff not conducting informed consent discussion will agree or strongly agree with the statement that, 鈥淪taff feel free to question the decisions or actions of those with more authority鈥 by [date]. |
Documentation | X percent of tests, treatments, or procedures requiring informed consent will have a signed consent form or chart notes documenting verbal consent. X percent of informed consent forms will have been completed prior to day of scheduled surgery by [date]. |
Workflow | Percentage of procedures delayed because of incomplete documentation of informed consent will be reduced to X percent by [date]. |
Data sources for monitoring progress on your objectives can come from the same sources as were used to assess hospital policies and practices (e.g., chart audits, the Health Care Professional Survey, the Patient Survey).
When thinking about sample size and frequency, remember that you're not necessarily looking for proof of statistically significant improvement. You're collecting data to gain confidence that progress is being made in implementing agreed upon changes.
- Look for "sentinel nodes." Figure out if there are key behaviors that will be indicative that the mindset of informed choice is taking hold, and monitor them.
- Check for weak links. Decide where the process is most likely to break down and focus attention on that area.
- Value qualitative data. Talking to a few people can give you key insights into implementation snags and how to fix them.
Troubleshooting Implementation Challenges
Effective implementation "requires changes in professional norms in addition to changes in individual clinicians鈥 knowledge and beliefs."3 There are many potential challenges and barriers to implementing improvements. Table 7 provides a list of these challenges, many drawn from the experiences of the pilot hospitals, as well as possible solutions for mitigating or addressing these challenges.
Table 7. Potential solutions to address implementation challenges
Implementation Challenges | Potential Solutions |
---|---|
Low priority on improving informed consent |
|
Limited resources for improving informed consent practices |
|
Physicians are not employees of the hospital limiting the ability to enforce training |
|
Staff turnover |
|
Physicians, independent nurse practitioners, and independent physician assistants see little need to improve their informed consent discussions with patients |
|
References
1. Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI). .
2. Aarons GA, Horowitz JD, Dlugosz LR, Ehrhart MG. The Role of Organizational Processes in Dissemination and Implementation Research. In: Brownson RC, Colditz GA, Proctor EK, editors. Dissemination and Implementation Research in Health: Translating Science to Practice. New York: Oxford University Press, Inc.; 2012. p. 128鈥53.
3. Weiner B, Amick H, Lee S-Y. Conceptualization and measurement of organizational readiness for change: a review of the literature in health services research and other fields. Medical Care Research and Review. 2008. PMID:18511812.
4. Wise CG, Alexander JA, Green LA, Cohen GR, Koster CR. Journey toward a patient-centered medical home: readiness for change in primary care practices. Milbank Q. 2011;89(3):399鈥424. PMID: 21933274.
5. Brach C, Lenfestey N, Roussel A, Amoozegar J, Sorensen A. Will It Work Here? A Decisionmaker's Guide to Adopting Innovations. Prepared by RTI International under Contract No. 233-02-0090. 大象视频 (AHRQ) Publication No. 08-0051. Rockville, MD: AHRQ; September 2008.
6. Damschroder LJ, Aron DC, Keith RE, Kirsh SR, Alexander JA, Lowery JC. Fostering implementation of health services research findings into practice: a consolidated framework for advancing implementation science. Implement Sci. 2009;4(1):50. PMID: 19664226.
7. Fleischer L RS, Miller SM, Partida Y, Martin-Boyan A, Soltoff C, et al. . Philadelphia: Temple University Health System. 2008.
8. 大象视频 (AHRQ). TeamSTEPPS Implementation Guide.
9. Shoemaker SJ, Wolf MS, Brach C. Development of the Patient Education Materials Assessment Tool (PEMAT): a new measure of understandability and actionability for print and audiovisual patient information. Patient Educ Couns. 2014;96(3):395鈥403. PMID: 24973195.
11. Greenhalgh T, Robert G, Bate P, Macfarlane F, Kyriakidou O. Diffusion of innovations in health service organisations: a systematic literature review: John Wiley & Sons; 2008.
Appendix A: Patient Survey to Assess Informed Consent 鈥 English Version
The following survey is intended to obtain feedback from patients immediately following an informed consent discussion to provide evaluative or quality improvement information to hospitals to assess and improve their informed consent processes using strategies described in the 大象视频Informed Consent Training Modules.
Instructions on How to Administer the Survey
Aim: This survey can be used in a quality improvement or evaluation effort after improvements to the informed consent process are implemented to measure informed consent explanations and associated patient understanding. This survey can also be used to identify weaknesses in the informed consent discussion, specifically if key components of informed consent are explained to patients and whether they understood the explanations.
Content: This survey can be given to patients or their family members who are asked to provide consent to tests, treatments, or procedures. This survey asks patients or surrogate decisionmakers to determine whether key components of a comprehensive informed consent discussion were explained and whether the explanations were easy for patients to understand. It also asks about unanswered questions, overall satisfaction with the consent discussion, and the consent form.
IRB: If appropriate per hospital policy, the hospital IRB should approve use of this survey before administering it to patients.
Patients to exclude: Patients and surrogate decisionmakers should be excluded if completing the survey might present undue burden at a very stressful time in their hospital stay or if they decline to complete the survey, or for other reasons deemed appropriate.
Timing of administration: The baseline survey should be administered to patients before an intervention to improve informed consent discussions (e.g., training) is implemented in a hospital unit. The followup survey should be administered to patients after the improvements to the informed consent discussion have been systematically and consistently implemented across the unit. The survey should be given to patients immediately following an informed consent discussion whether or not consent was given.
Interpreters and readers: The survey is available in English and Spanish. Administrators should offer to read the survey to patients.
Survey
We are doing this study to understand how to improve the informed consent process to treatment鈥攁 process by which a patient is told about the risks and benefits of proposed tests, treatments, or procedures, as well as alternatives, and makes a decision based on that information.
We are asking you to answer the following questions based on the talk you just had with the doctor or nurse about having a test, treatment, or operation. Your answers will help the hospital understand what information patients get before giving consent for tests, treatments, or operations. That will let the hospital make improvements.
Before you take this survey you should know the following:
- Your participation is voluntary.
- It should only take you 5 minutes to complete this survey.
- This survey does not collect any personal or health information about you.
- You do not have to complete this survey.
- Your medical care will not change in any way if you do not take this survey.
- Your relationship with your health care providers or the hospital will not change if you do not take the survey.
- If you decide to take this survey, you can stop answering the questions at any time.
- There is no cost to you for taking this survey.
- The principal risk of this survey is a small risk of loss of confidentiality. The survey team has many procedures in place to reduce this risk.
Who Spoke with You.
Who was the main person who spoke with you about having a test, treatment, or operation?
1|___| My personal doctor
2|___| A doctor from the hospital
3|___| A nurse from the hospital
4|___| I don't know
5|___| No one spoke to me about a test, treatment, or operation.
6|___| Other: ________________________________________________
1. An interpreter is someone who helps you talk with others who do not speak your language. Did you use an interpreter to speak with that person?
1|___| No, I speak English very well.
2|___| No, we spoke in English although I do not speak English very well.
3|___| No, that person spoke my language very well (for example, we both speak Spanish very well).
4|___| No, that person spoke my language a little.
5|___| Yes, we spoke with the help of an interpreter provided by the hospital.
6|___| Yes, we spoke with the help of my friend or family member.
Explanations about the Main Test, Treatment or Operation.
Think about the main test, treatment, or operation you talked about.
2. Did the main person who spoke to you explain what would likely happen if you had the test, treatment or operation?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No 鈫 If no, go to Question 7
3. Was the explanation about what would likely happen if you had the test, treatment, or operation easy to understand?
1|___| Yes, definitely
2|___| Yes, somewhat
3|___| No
4. Did that person ask you to describe your understanding of what would likely happen if you had the test, treatment, or operation?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No
5. Did that person explain what might go wrong and how likely it was that something would go wrong?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No 鈫 If no, go to Question 8
6. Was the explanation about what might go wrong and how likely it was easy to understand?
1|___| Yes, definitely
2|___| Yes, somewhat
3|___| No
Other Possible Tests, Treatments, or Operations.
7. Did the main person who spoke to you describe your other options, such as having a different test, treatment, or operation or having no test, treatment, or operation?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No 鈫 If no, go to Question 9
8. Was the description of your other options easy to understand?
1|___| Yes, definitely
2|___| Yes, somewhat
3|___| No
9. A decision aid provides information and helps you think about your options for tests, treatments, or operations. A decision aid can be on paper or be a video, audio tape, or computer program. Did anyone show you a decision aid or give you a decision aid to use?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No 鈫 If no, go to Question 11
10. Did you find the decision aid helpful in deciding whether to have a test, treatment, or operation?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No
3|___| I didn't use it
About the Discussion.
11. Did the main person who spoke to you listen carefully to you?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No
12. Did that person spend enough time with you?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No
13. Did that person ask you what matters most to you in choosing what to do?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No
14. Did that person encourage you to ask questions?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No
15. After the discussion, did you have any questions that were not answered?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No 鈫 If no, go to Question 17
16. Why were your questions not answered?
1|___| I asked, but I didn't get an answer.
2|___| I asked, but the response didn't answer my questions.
3|___| I asked, but the response was hard to understand.
4|___| There wasn't enough time to ask questions.
5|___| I didn't feel that I could ask questions.
6|___| Other:___________________________________________________________
17. Did you feel like you had enough information about all the options to make a decision?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No
18. Did you feel free to choose any of the options, including the choice of not having any test, treatment, or operation?
1|___| Yes
2|___| No
19. Overall, how satisfied are you with the experience you had discussing the options for tests, treatments, or operations and making a decision?
1|___| Very unsatisfied
2|___| Somewhat unsatisfied
3|___| Somewhat satisfied
4|___| Very satisfied
The Consent Form.
20. Was the consent form you were asked to sign for the test, treatment, or operation in a language you read very well?
1|___| Yes, it was in English and I read English very well.
2|___| Yes, it was in my language (not English) and I read my language very well.
3|___| No, it was in English and I do not read English very well.
4|___| No, it was in my language (not English) and I do not read my language very well.
5|___| I did not look at the form.
6|___| I was not asked to sign a form 鈫 Go to Question 23
21. Did anyone help you read the form?
1|___| Yes, someone from the hospital read it to me in English.
2|___| Yes, someone from the hospital read it to me in my language (not English).
3|___| Yes, a friend or family member read it to me in English.
4|___| Yes, a friend or family member read it to me in my language (not English).
5|___| No, I read it myself.
6|___| No, no one helped me read the form and I did not read it 鈫 Go to Question 23
22. How easy was the form to understand?
1|___| Very hard to understand.
2|___| Somewhat hard to understand.
3|___| Somewhat easy to understand.
4|___| Very easy to understand.
Person who Completed Survey.
23. Please select the option that best describes the person who answered these questions.
1|___| I am the patient.
2|___| I am the parent, legal guardian, or health care proxy of the patient.
3|___| I am a family member or friend of the patient.
4|___| Other
Appendix B: Patient Survey to Assess Informed Consent 鈥 Spanish Version
The following survey is intended to obtain feedback from patients immediately following an informed consent discussion to provide evaluative or quality improvement information to hospitals to assess and improve their informed consent processes using strategies described in the 大象视频Informed Consent Training Modules.
Instructions on How To Administer the Survey
Aim: This survey can be used in a quality improvement or evaluation effort after improvements to the informed consent process are implemented to measure informed consent explanations and associated patient understanding. This survey can also be used to identify weaknesses in the informed consent discussion, specifically if key components of informed consent are explained to patients and whether they understood the explanations.
Content: This survey can be given to patients or their family members who are asked to provide consent to tests, treatments, or procedures. This survey asks patients or surrogate decisionmakers to determine whether key components of a comprehensive informed consent discussion were explained and whether the explanations were easy for patients to understand. It also asks about unanswered questions, overall satisfaction with the consent discussion and the consent form.
IRB: If appropriate per hospital policy, the hospital IRB should approve use of this survey before administering it to patients.
Patients to exclude: Patients and surrogate decisionmakers should be excluded if completing the survey might present undue burden at a very stressful time in their hospital stay or if they decline to complete the survey, or for other reasons deemed appropriate.
Timing of administration: The baseline survey should be administered to patients before an intervention to improve informed consent discussions (e.g., training) is implemented in a hospital unit. The followup survey should be administered to patients after the improvements to the informed consent discussion have been systematically and consistently implemented across the unit. The survey should be given to patients immediately following an informed consent discussion whether or not consent was given.
Interpreters and readers: The survey is available in English and Spanish. Administrators should offer to read the survey to patients.
Encuesta Para Pacientes
Estamos haciendo este encuesta para entender c贸mo mejorar el proceso de consentimiento informado para los tratamientos m茅dicos鈥攗n proceso por el cual se le explica a un paciente los riesgos y los beneficios de tratamientos o procedimientos m茅dicos ofrecidos y de sus alternativas, y con esa informaci贸n, el paciente toma su decisi贸n.
Le estamos solicitando que responda las siguientes preguntas bas谩ndose en la conversaci贸n que acaba de tener con el m茅dico o enfermera (o) sobre la necesidad de hacerse a una prueba, un tratamiento o una operaci贸n. Sus respuestas ayudar谩n al hospital a entender qu茅 informaci贸n obtienen los pacientes antes de otorgar su consentimiento para pruebas, tratamientos u operaciones. Eso ayudar谩 al hospital a hacer mejoras.
Antes de que complete este formulario, debe saber lo siguiente:
- Su participaci贸n es voluntaria.
- Completar esta encuesta generalmente durar谩 menos de 5 minutos.
- No est谩 obligado a completar esta encuesta.
- Esta encuesta no recopila informaci贸n personal de usted o de su salud.
- No habr谩 ning煤n tipo de cambio en su atenci贸n m茅dica si no participa en esta encuesta.
- Su relaci贸n con sus proveedores m茅dicos o de salud no cambiar谩 si no participa en esta encuesta.
- Si decide participar en la encuesta, puede dejar de responder las preguntas en cualquier momento.
- No hay ning煤n costo para completar la encuesta.
- El riesgo principal de este estudio es un peque帽o riesgo de p茅rdida de confidencialidad. El equipo de investigaci贸n tiene muchos procesos para reducir este riesgo.
Qui茅n habl贸 con usted.
驴Qui茅n fue la persona principal que habl贸 con usted sobre la necesidad de realizarse una prueba, un tratamiento o una operaci贸n?
1|___| Mi m茅dico personal
2|___| Un m茅dico del hospital
3|___| Una (o) enfermera (o) del hospital
4|___| No s茅
5|___| Nadie habl贸 conmigo sobre la necesidad de realizarme una prueba, un tratamiento o una operaci贸n
6|___| Otro: ________________________________________________
1. Un int茅rprete es alguien que le ayuda a comunicarse con otras personas que no hablan su mismo idioma. 驴Utiliz贸 el servicio de un int茅rprete para hablar con esa persona?
1|___| No, hablo muy bien Ingl茅s.
2|___| No, hablamos en Ingl茅s aunque yo no lo hablo muy bien.
3|___| No, la persona hablaba mi idioma muy bien (por ejemplo, los dos hablamos muy bien espa帽ol).
4|___| No, esa persona habl贸 un poco en mi idioma.
5|___| S铆, hablamos con la ayuda de un int茅rprete proporcionado por el hospital.
6|___| S铆, hablamos con la ayuda de un amigo m铆o o familiar.
Explicaciones sobre la prueba, el tratamiento o la operaci贸n principal.
Piense en el tratamiento, la prueba o la operaci贸n principal sobre la que hablaron.
2. 驴La persona principal que habl贸 con usted le explic贸 lo qu茅 probablemente suceder铆a si se realiza la prueba, el tratamiento o la operaci贸n?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No 鈫 Si la respuesta es no, pase a la pregunta 6
3. 驴Fue f谩cil de entender la explicaci贸n sobre lo que probablemente suceder铆a si se realiza la prueba, el tratamiento o la operaci贸n?
1|___| S铆, definitivamente
2|___| S铆, m谩s o menos
3|___| No
4. 驴Esa persona le pidi贸 que describiera lo que entendi贸 sobre lo que probablemente suceder铆a si se realiza la prueba, el tratamiento o la operaci贸n?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No
5. 驴Esa persona le explic贸 qu茅 podr铆a salir mal y qu茅 probabilidad hab铆a de que algo saliera mal?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No 鈫 Si la respuesta es no, pase a la pregunta 8
6. 驴Fue f谩cil de entender la explicaci贸n sobre qu茅 podr铆a salir mal y qu茅 probabilidad hab铆a de que sucediera?
1|___| S铆, definitivamente
2|___| S铆, m谩s o menos
3|___| No
Otras pruebas, tratamientos u operaciones posibles.
7. 驴La persona principal que habl贸 con usted le describi贸 sus otras opciones, como el realizarse una prueba, un tratamiento o una operaci贸n diferente o no realizarse ninguna prueba, tratamiento ni operaci贸n?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No 鈫 Si la respuesta es no, pase a la pregunta 9
8. 驴Fue f谩cil de entender la descripci贸n de sus otras opciones?
1|___| S铆, definitivamente
2|___| S铆, m谩s o menos
3|___| No
9. La asistencia para decisiones brinda informaci贸n y le ayuda a pensar en sus opciones de pruebas, tratamientos u operaciones. La asistencia para decisiones puede ser en papel o en un video, una grabaci贸n de audio o un programa de computadora. 驴Alguien le mostr贸 o le dio alguna asistencia para decisiones para que la usara?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No 鈫 Si la respuesta es no, pase a la pregunta 11
10. 驴Le fue 煤til la asistencia para decisiones para decidir si realizarse o no a una prueba, un tratamiento o una operaci贸n?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No
3|___| No la us茅
Acerca de la conversaci贸n.
11. 驴La persona principal que habl贸 con usted lo (a) escuch贸 atentamente?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No
12. 驴Esa persona pas贸 suficiente tiempo con usted?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No
13. 驴Esa persona le pregunt贸 qu茅 era lo m谩s importante para usted al decidir qu茅 hacer?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No
14. 驴Esa persona lo alent贸 a que hiciera preguntas?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No
15. Despu茅s de la conversaci贸n, 驴tuvo alguna pregunta que no fuera respondida?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No 鈫 Si la respuesta es no, pase a la pregunta 17
16. 驴Por qu茅 no obtuvo respuestas a sus preguntas?
1|___| Pregunt茅, pero no obtuve una respuesta.
2|___| Pregunt茅, pero la respuesta no respondi贸 mis preguntas.
3|___| Pregunt茅, pero fue dif铆cil entender la respuesta.
4|___| No hubo suficiente tiempo para hacer preguntas.
5|___| No sent铆 que pudiera hacer preguntas.
6|___| Otro:___________________________________________________________
17. 驴Cree que recibi贸 suficiente informaci贸n sobre todas las opciones para tomar una decisi贸n?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No
18. 驴Se sinti贸 con libertad de elegir alguna de las opciones, incluida la decisi贸n de no realizarse ninguna prueba, tratamiento u operaci贸n?
1|___| S铆
2|___| No
19. En general, 驴qu茅 tan satisfecho est谩 con la experiencia de haber conversado sobre las opciones de pruebas, tratamientos u operaciones y tomar una decisi贸n?
1|___| Muy insatisfecho
2|___| Un poco insatisfecho
3|___| Un poco satisfecho
4|___| Muy satisfecho
El formulario de consentimiento.
20. 驴El formulario de consentimiento que se le solicit贸 que firmara para la prueba, el tratamiento o la operaci贸n estaba en un idioma que usted lee muy bien?
1|___| S铆, estaba en Ingl茅s y yo leo muy bien en Ingl茅s.
2|___| S铆, estaba en mi idioma (que no es el Ingl茅s) y yo leo muy bien en mi idioma.
3|___| No, estaba en Ingl茅s y yo no leo muy bien en Ingl茅s.
4|___| No, estaba en mi idioma (que no es el ingl茅s) y yo no leo muy bien en mi idioma.
5|___| No vi el formulario
6|___| No se me solicit贸 que firmara un formulario 鈫 Pase a la pregunta 23
21. 驴Alguien le ayud贸 a leer el formulario?
1|___| S铆, alguien del hospital me lo ley贸 en Ingl茅s.
2|___| S铆, alguien del hospital me lo ley贸 en mi idioma (que no es el Ingl茅s).
3|___| S铆, un amigo o familiar me lo ley贸 en Ingl茅s.
4|___| S铆, un amigo o familiar me lo ley贸 en mi idioma (que no es el Ingl茅s).
5|___| No, lo le铆 yo solo.
6|___| No, nadie me ayud贸 a leer el formulario y no lo le铆 鈫 Pase a la pregunta 23
22. 驴Qu茅 tan f谩cil fue de entender el formulario?
1|___| Muy dif铆cil de entender
2|___| Algo dif铆cil de entender
3|___| Algo f谩cil de entender
4|___| Muy f谩cil de entender
La persona que complet贸 la encuesta.
23. Seleccione la opci贸n que mejor describe a la persona que respondi贸 estas preguntas.
1|___| Soy el paciente.
2|___| Soy el padre, la madre, el tutor legal o el representante en cuestiones de atenci贸n m茅dica del paciente.
3|___| Soy un familiar o un amigo del paciente.
4|___| Otro
Appendix C: Health Care Professional Survey to Assess Informed Consent
Instructions on Administration of the Survey
The health care professional survey can be administered via paper or through an online survey platform that will automatically total the results. Below are the details of the survey's administration.
Aim: By measuring staff knowledge, learning, and attitudes, this survey can be used to: 1) assess your current informed consent to treatment processes, or 2) evaluate whether quality improvements to the informed consent process have been implemented.
Content: This survey asks about what role the staff member plays in providing consent, what the current process of informed consent is for their unit, the effectiveness of informed consent at their institution, their ability to complete the teach-back process, their attitudes about informed consent, and general background information on the staff member. The post-survey can be used after the completion of a QI project, and thus also asks questions about the impact of the informed consent training.
IRB: If appropriate per hospital policy, the hospital IRB should approve use of this survey before administering it to staff.
Staff to exclude: Any staff member who is not eligible to participate in the health care provider training module.
Timing of administration: The first iteration of the survey will be administered to staff before the staff complete the training on informed consent is implemented in participating hospital units. The followup survey will be administered to staff about 2-3 months after the improvements to the informed consent discussion and process have been systematically and consistently implemented across participating units.
Interpreters and readers: The survey is available only in English.
Survey
We are surveying you to understand how to improve the informed consent process9 鈥攁 process by which a patient is told about the risks and benefits of proposed tests, treatments, or procedures, as well as alternatives, and makes a decision based on that information.
If you agree to participate in this survey, we will:
- Ask you questions about your hospital's informed consent policies and processes, your self-reported use of evidence-based practices described in the health care professional training module, a self-assessment of your informed consent process effectiveness, and your attitude regarding patients' rights in informed consent.
- Ask you about your experiences, to capture how learning and strategy implementation affected behavior, and/or yielded results.
Before you take the survey you should know the following:
- Your participation is voluntary.
- This survey should only take you 20 minutes to complete.
- You do not have to complete this survey.
- If you decide to take this survey, you can stop answering the questions at any time.
- There is no cost to you for taking this survey.
- You can refuse to take part in this survey without any effect on your professional relationship with your hospital.
Role in Informed Consent.
1. Which best describes your typical role in informed consent for tests/treatments/procedures (check all that apply):
|___| I am not involved in informed consent, and I am unaware when or whether it is done.
|___| I am not involved in informed consent, but I am aware when or whether it is done.
|___| I provide information on the test/treatment/procedure, risk/benefits, and alternatives to patients for informed consent.
|___| I conduct the informed consent discussion with patients.
|___| I show decision aids to patients.
|___| I obtain signatures on the consent form (paper or electronic).
|___| I confirm that patients have provided consent.
|___| I am focused on informed consent for the hospital because of my safety or quality role.
|___| Other (please describe): __________________________________________________
Current Informed Consent Policy.
4. To what extent do you agree or disagree with the following statements:
Strongly Disagree | Disagree | Neither Agree Nor Disagree | Agree | Strongly Agree | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a) I know which tests, treatments, and procedures require written consent. | |||||
b) I know which tests, treatments, and procedures require verbal consent. | |||||
c) I know which members of the clinical team are permitted to conduct the informed consent discussion. | |||||
d) I know when and how to assess a patient's capacity to consent. | |||||
e) I know what the witness who signs the informed consent form is testifying to. | |||||
f) I know the exceptions to informed consent requirements. | |||||
g) I know how to handle cases when informed consent was obtained before the patient came to the hospital. | |||||
h) I am clear about my role in the informed consent process. |
Current Informed Consent Process.
2. For tests/treatments/procedures that require informed consent, how frequently do clinicians in your unit do the following when obtaining informed consent?
Check "DK" (Don't Know) if you don't know what clinicians do in your unit.
Never | Sometimes | Usually | Always | DK | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a) Assess patients' decisionmaking capacity | |||||
b) Allocate ample time in private space | |||||
c) Use health literacy universal precautions | |||||
d) Call for qualified interpreters when conducting a consent discussion with a patient who speaks a different language | |||||
e) Offer choices, including the option of doing nothing | |||||
f) Engage patients, family, and friends in the consent discussion | |||||
g) Elicit goals and values | |||||
h) Encourage questions | |||||
i) Use high-quality structured patient decision aids (e.g., tool to help a patient understand the benefits, harms, and risks of a test, treatment, or procedure and make a decision) | |||||
j) Neutrally explain the benefits, harms, and risks of all options | |||||
k) Use teach-back techniques to check patient understanding | |||||
l) Better document the informed consent discussion | |||||
m) Ask patients to confirm consent immediately before test, treatment, or procedure when consent has been given in advance |
3. For tests/treatments/procedures that require informed consent, how frequently do you do the following when obtaining informed consent?
Check "NA" (not applicable) if the statement does not apply to your responsibilities or you don't know what the statement is referring to.
Never | Sometimes | Usually | Always | DK | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a) Assess patients' decisionmaking capacity | |||||
b) Allocate ample time in private space | |||||
c) Use health literacy universal precautions | |||||
d) Call for qualified interpreters when conducting a consent discussion with a patient who speaks a different language | |||||
e) Offer choices, including the option of doing nothing | |||||
f) Engage patients, family, and friends in the consent discussion | |||||
g) Elicit goals and values | |||||
h) Encourage questions | |||||
i) Use high-quality structured patient decision aids (e.g., tool to help a patient understand the benefits, harms, and risks of a test, treatment, or procedure and make a decision) | |||||
j) Neutrally explain the benefits, harms, and risks of all options | |||||
k) Use teach-back techniques to check patient understanding | |||||
l) Better document the informed consent discussion | |||||
m) Ask patients to confirm consent immediately before test, treatment, or procedure when consent has been given in advance |
Informed Consent Process Overall Effectiveness.
5. On a scale from 1 to 10 where 1 is the worst and 10 is the best, how well does your unit ensure patients are making an informed choice?
|___| 1 鈥 Worst
|___| 2
|___| 3
|___| 4
|___| 5
|___| 6
|___| 7
|___| 8
|___| 9
|___| 10 鈥 Best
|___| DK 鈥 Don't know
6. On a scale from 1 to 10 where 1 is the worst and 10 is the best, please rate how well do you ensure patients are making an informed choice?
|___| 1 鈥 Worst
|___| 2
|___| 3
|___| 4
|___| 5
|___| 6
|___| 7
|___| 8
|___| 9
|___| 10 鈥 Best
|___| N/A 鈥 I'm not involved in the consent process
Teach-Back Self Efficacy
Teach-back is a way to check that you have explained to patients what they need to know in a manner that they understand. Patient understanding is confirmed when they are able to explain it back to you in their own words.
7. On a scale from 1 to 10, how confident are you in your ability to use teach-back in an informed consent discussion? (1 = "not at all confident", 10 = "very confident")
|___| 1 鈥 not at all confident
|___| 2
|___| 3
|___| 4
|___| 5
|___| 6
|___| 7
|___| 8
|___| 9
|___| 10 鈥 very confident
|___| N/A 鈥 I'm not involved in the consent process
Attitudes about Informed Consent
8. To what extent do you agree or disagree with the following statements:
Strongly Disagree | Disagree | Neither Agree Nor Disagree | Agree | Strongly Agree | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
a) Clinicians should encourage patients to talk about their values when deciding whether to consent to a test, treatment, or procedure. | |||||
b) Clinicians are in a better position than patients to decide which tests, treatments, or procedures patients need. | |||||
c) Clinicians should not present alternatives that are demonstrably less effective. | |||||
d) Refusing a life-saving treatment or procedure demonstrates that the patient is not capable of making a sound decision. | |||||
e) Clinicians are responsible for ensuring that patients understand all their options before making a decision. | |||||
f) Getting the patient鈥檚 signature on a consent form is the most critical part of the informed consent process. | |||||
g) Lack of patient understanding of benefits, harms, and risks of treatments is a serious patient safety problem. | |||||
h) The informed consent process is worth the time it takes. | |||||
i) The chief purpose of informed consent processes is to comply with regulations and be protected from lawsuits. |
Background Information.10
This information will help in the analysis of the survey results.
9. How long have you worked in this hospital?
|___| a. Less than 1 year
|___| b. 1 to 5 years
|___| c. 6 to 10 years
|___| d. 11 to 15 years
|___| e. 16 to 20 years
|___| f. 21 years or more
10. How long have you worked in your current hospital work area/unit?
|___| a. Less than 1 year
|___| b. 1 to 5 years
|___| c. 6 to 10 years
|___| d. 11 to 15 years
|___| e. 16 to 20 years
|___| f. 21 years or more
11. What is your staff position in this hospital? Select ONE answer that best describes your staff position.
|___| a. Registered Nurse
|___| b. Physician Assistant/Nurse Practitioner
|___| c. LVN/LPN
|___| d. Patient Care Asst/Hospital Aide/Care Partner
|___| e. Attending/Staff Physician
|___| f. Resident Physician/Physician in Training
|___| g. Pharmacist
|___| h. Dietician
|___| i. Unit Assistant/Clerk/Secretary
|___| j. Respiratory Therapist
|___| k. Physical, Occupational, or Speech Therapist
|___| l. Technician (e.g., EKG, Lab, Radiology)
|___| m. Administration/Management
|___| n. Other, please specify:
12. How long have you worked in your current specialty or profession?
|___| a. Less than 1 year
|___| b. 1 to 5 years
|___| c. 6 to 10 years
|___| d. 11 to 15 years
|___| e. 16 to 20 years
|___| f. 21 years or more
13. In your staff position, do you typically have direct interaction or contact with patients?
|___| a. YES, I typically have direct interaction or contact with patients.
|___| b. NO, I typically do NOT have direct interaction or contact with patients.
14. In which hospital unit do you primarily work?
|___| [insert other participating units ]
|___| [insert other participating units ]
|___| [insert other participating units ]
1To take the modules for continuing education credit on The Joint Commission's learning management system, go .
2To request the modules to run on your own learning management system, or a PowerPoint file containing screenshots and the audio scripts of the modules, email healthliteracy@ahrq.hhs.gov.
3See A Practical Guide to Informed Consent7 for audit tools
4See the Patient Survey provided in Appendixes A and B
5You can collect the informed consent forms used throughout your hospital and test patient understanding (e.g., "Can you tell me in your own words what are the potential risks of the surgery you are having?"9).
6Use the Health Care Professional Survey in the Appendix C to understand the extent to which physicians, physician assistants, nurse practitioners, and other nurses follow informed consent policy and use best practices. (Also see the survey in Practical Guide to Informed Consent in the Leaders Module resource section.)
7For example, a patient safety event could be that no interpreter was involved in conversation with a patient with limited English proficiency, resulting in the patient's misunderstanding the nature of the procedure.
8The TeamSTEPPS assertive statements: I am Concerned!, I am Uncomfortable, This is a Safety issue!
9When using the survey to monitor progress in improving informed consent processes you can change the wording to, "We are surveying you to track improvement of the informed consent process."
10Questions taken from the 大象视频Hospital Survey on Patient Safety.
Disclaimer of Conflict of Interest
None of the authors has any affiliations or financial involvement that conflicts with the material presented.
Funding Statement
This project was funded under contract number HHSA290201000031I, TO #3 from the 大象视频 (AHRQ), U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The opinions expressed in this document are those of the authors and do not reflect the official position of 大象视频or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Public Domain Notice
This document is in the public domain and may be used and reprinted without permission except those copyrighted materials that are clearly noted in the document. Further reproduction of those copyrighted materials is prohibited without the specific permission of copyright holders.
Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the staff of the four hospitals that participated in the pilot testing of the modules, who shared their insights with the research team.
Suggested Citation
Suggested citation: Shoemaker S, Brach C. Implementation Guide for AHRQ鈥檚 Making Informed Consent an Informed Choice Training Modules. Prepared under Contract No. HHSA290201000031I, TO #3. 大象视频Publication No. 17-0061-1-EF. Rockville, MD: 大象视频; January 2017.