Core EM - Emergency Medicine Podcast

Episode 210: Capacity Assessment
We discuss capacity assessment, patient autonomy, safety, and documentation.
Hosts:
Anne Levine, MD
Brian Gilberti, MD
- Arises frequently in the ED, even when not formally recognized
- Carries both legal implications and ethical weight
- Failure to appropriately assess capacity can result in:
- Forced treatment without justification
- Missed opportunities to respect autonomy
- Increased risk of litigation and poor patient outcomes
- Capacity is:
- Decision-specific: varies based on the medical choice at hand
- Time-specific: can fluctuate due to medical conditions, intoxication, delirium
- Distinct from competency, which is a legal determination
- Relies on a patient’s ability to:
- Understand relevant information
- Appreciate the consequences
- Reason through options
- Communicate a clear choice
- Intoxicated patient with head trauma refusing CT
- Unreliable neuro exam
- Potentially time-sensitive intracranial injury
- Elderly patient with sepsis refusing admission due to caregiving responsibilities
- Balancing autonomy vs. beneficence
- Patient with gangrenous diabetic foot refusing surgery
- Demonstrates logic and consistency despite high-risk decision
- Understanding
- Can the patient explain:
- Their condition
- Recommended treatments
- Risks and benefits
- Alternatives and outcomes?
- Sample prompts:
- “What are the options for your situation?”
- “What might happen if we do nothing?”
- Appreciation
- Does the patient grasp the personal relevance of the information?
- Sample prompts:
- “Why do you think we’re recommending this?”
- “How do you think this condition could affect you?”
- Reasoning
- Can the patient logically explain their choice?
- Must demonstrate a rational process, even if the outcome seems unwise
- Sample prompts:
- “What factors are you considering in making this decision?”
- “What led you to this conclusion?”
- Choice
- Is the patient able to clearly communicate a decision?
- Any modality acceptable: verbal, written, gestural
- Sample prompts:
- “We’ve discussed several options. What do you want to do?”
- “Have you decided what option is best for you?”
Time Pressure
- Capacity assessments can be time-consuming
- Yet, patients leaving AMA without proper evaluation are at higher risk:
- ↑ 30-day mortality
- ↑ 30-day readmission
Communication Barriers
- Language differences → use certified interpreters
- Cognitive impairment or psych illness → clarify baseline status
- Noisy ED environment → relocate to quiet space
- Use simple language, avoid jargon
Ethical Dilemmas
- Providers may disagree with patient choices
- Ensure decision-making process—not the choice itself—is being judged
- Use tools like the Aid to Capacity Evaluation (ACE)
- When uncertain, consult Psychiatry or Risk Management
Clearly document:
- The patient’s understanding, appreciation, reasoning, and choice
- Information delivered:
- Condition
- Treatment recommendations
- Alternatives and risks
- Patient’s responses and logic
- Witnesses to the conversation
- Any discharge instructions, including:
- Follow-up plans
- Prescriptions provided
- Return precautions
Also document:
- If patient refused treatment, document:
- That risks and benefits were clearly explained
- That refusal was voluntary
- If treatment was administered despite objection:
- Document rationale for presumed lack of capacity
- Legal/ethical justification for action
- Involvement of other services (e.g., Psychiatry, Risk)
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