Navigating Care Refusal and Noncompliance in Patients with Opioid Use Disorder

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

For many emergency physicians (EPs), deciding whether or not to allow a patient suffering the ill effects of opioid use to refuse care is the most frequent and fraught situation in which they encounter issues of decision-making capacity, informed refusal, and autonomy. Despite the frequency of this issue and the well-known impacts of opioid use disorder on decision-making, the medical ethics community has offered little targeted analysis or guidance regarding these situations.

Discussion

As a result, EPs demonstrate significant variability in how they evaluate and respond to them, with highly divergent understandings and application of concepts such as decision-making capacity, informed consent, autonomy, legal repercussions, and strategies to resolve the clinical dilemma. In this paper, we seek to provide more clarity to this issue for the EPs.

Conclusions

Successfully navigating this issue requires that EPs understand the specific effects that opioid use disorder has on decision-making, and how that in turn bears on the ethical concepts of autonomy, capacity, and informed refusal. Understanding these concepts can lead to helpful strategies to resolve these commonly-encountered dilemmas.

引导阿片类药物使用障碍患者拒绝和不遵守医嘱的行为
背景对于许多急诊医生(EPs)来说,决定是否允许因使用阿片类药物而受到不良影响的患者拒绝接受治疗是他们遇到决策能力、知情拒绝和自主权等问题时最常见和最棘手的情况。因此,EPs 在评估和应对这些情况时表现出很大的差异,对决策能力、知情同意、自主权、法律后果和解决临床困境的策略等概念的理解和应用也大相径庭。在本文中,我们试图为急诊科医生澄清这一问题。结论要成功解决这一问题,急诊科医生必须了解阿片类药物使用障碍对决策的具体影响,以及这反过来又如何影响到自主性、能力和知情拒绝等伦理概念。了解这些概念可以为解决这些经常遇到的困境提供有益的策略。
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来源期刊
Journal of Emergency Medicine
Journal of Emergency Medicine 医学-急救医学
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
6.70%
发文量
339
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Emergency Medicine is an international, peer-reviewed publication featuring original contributions of interest to both the academic and practicing emergency physician. JEM, published monthly, contains research papers and clinical studies as well as articles focusing on the training of emergency physicians and on the practice of emergency medicine. The Journal features the following sections: • Original Contributions • Clinical Communications: Pediatric, Adult, OB/GYN • Selected Topics: Toxicology, Prehospital Care, The Difficult Airway, Aeromedical Emergencies, Disaster Medicine, Cardiology Commentary, Emergency Radiology, Critical Care, Sports Medicine, Wound Care • Techniques and Procedures • Technical Tips • Clinical Laboratory in Emergency Medicine • Pharmacology in Emergency Medicine • Case Presentations of the Harvard Emergency Medicine Residency • Visual Diagnosis in Emergency Medicine • Medical Classics • Emergency Forum • Editorial(s) • Letters to the Editor • Education • Administration of Emergency Medicine • International Emergency Medicine • Computers in Emergency Medicine • Violence: Recognition, Management, and Prevention • Ethics • Humanities and Medicine • American Academy of Emergency Medicine • AAEM Medical Student Forum • Book and Other Media Reviews • Calendar of Events • Abstracts • Trauma Reports • Ultrasound in Emergency Medicine
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