Informed consent
Before a doctor, nurse or any healthcare practitioner can examine or treat you, they usually need your consent or permission. This could simply mean following their suggestions, such as the doctor asking you if they can take your blood pressure and you position your arm so they can do the task. Sometimes, depending on the seriousness of the proposed treatment or procedure or if it involves an anaesthetic they will ask you to sign a consent form. If you later change your mind, you can withdraw that consent, even if you have signed a form.
It is important that you have sufficient information so that you understand and make an appropriate decision about that proposed treatment or procedure. The Consent Forms and Patient Information Sheets provide information such as what the procedure and the anaesthetic involves, what to expect before and after the procedure or treatment, the risks and benefits and any alternative options that maybe available to you. Providing this information assists you to become more actively involved in your own health care decision making.
This information has been designed to be an adjunct not a replacement to the time spent discussing your treatment or procedure with your doctor, nurse or healthcare practitioner.
Informed consent translated multicultural resources
We have informed consent factsheets translated into multiple languages to explain what informed consent is in healthcare. These factsheets also explain why you need to give consent, who can give consent, who gives consent for a child, how much time you have to decide, how to ask for an interpreter and what if you give consent and change your mind.
Video – informed consent in health care
Metro South Heath have produced a video to help explain the informed consent in healthcare process.
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