Ethics

A case for when, how, and why to evaluate capacity


 

Ethical framework to make assessment

Capacity is described by four decisional abilities: 1) communicate a choice, 2) understand relevant information, 3) appreciation, and 4) reasoning.7

Communication of a choice may be verbal or nonverbal, but the patient must be able to indicate the treatment choice clearly and consistently. Understanding describes knowing essential information a physician has conveyed. This is assessed by having the patients say back what they were told, such as: “Can you tell me in your own words what is a PEG tube?”

The components of appreciation are: the diagnosis or disorder and the benefits and risks of the proposed intervention as it relates to the diagnosis or disorder. Patients who appreciate their disorder have insight into their condition: “I’m not eating because I have an infection.” This can be assessed with a question such as: “Can you tell me in your own words what are the risks or downsides to you?” This prompt assesses the patient’s appreciation of risk. Reframing the question to ask, “Can you tell me about the upsides of this intervention?” will assess the patient’s appreciation of benefit.

Reasoning assesses the thought process and rationale for a person’s decision. It has two components – comparative and consequential reasoning. The first compares the different choices presented about the proposed intervention: “How does having a PEG tube compare to not having it?” The second asks about the consequences of each choice: “What might happen to a person who has the PEG tube?”

The capacity assessment evaluates a patient's performance on these decision-making abilities. This informs the clinician’s judgment of whether the patient has the capacity to make a decision. A patient who has capacity makes the choice, regardless of the physician’s preference or recommendation.

The physician’s duty is to decide which decision-making abilities to assess. Choice and understanding are essential. In riskier or more consequential decisions, a physician may raise the rigor of the assessment to include appreciation and reasoning.8 It is common practice for physicians to raise the standard for when to evaluate and how extensive their evaluation is when the decision is life-altering, as with a PEG tube versus a more routine, non–life-altering decision such as drawing blood for a routine wellness visit.

A simple scoring rubric determines the patient’s ability to answer each question along a range from adequate = 2, marginal = 1, to inadequate = 0. The extremes or adequate or inadequate are straightforward. Judgment is needed when performance is marginal. In the case of repeated marginal answers, a physician must strongly consider whether the patient lacks capacity to make the decision in question.9

Who receives a capacity assessment and when?

A good doctor is a good teacher. A doctor should therefore check that patients understand what is happening with their health. Assessing understanding is simply good medicine; for example, a good teacher ought to be asking an unimpaired patient without impaired cognition, “Can you say back to me the key points of what I explained?” With this approach, every patient is effectively “screened” for a capacity impairment.

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