When Parents Request Nondisclosure: Rights of Adolescents to Access Their Health Information and Implications of the 21st Century Cures Act Final Rule.

Q3 Medicine
Edward McArdle, Karen L Teelin, Adrienne Borschuk, Amy E Caruso Brown
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Abstract

AbstractDespite broad ethical consensus supporting developmentally appropriate disclosure of health information to older children and adolescents, cases in which parents and caregivers request nondisclosure continue to pose moral dilemmas for clinicians. State laws vary considerably regarding adolescents' rights to autonomy, privacy, and confidentiality, with many states not specifically addressing adolescents' right to their own healthcare information. The requirements of the 21st Century Cures Act have raised important ethical concerns for pediatricians and adolescent healthcare professionals regarding the protection of adolescent privacy and confidentiality, given requirements that chart notes and results be made readily available to patients via electronic portals. Less addressed have been the implications of the act for adolescents' access to their health information, since many healthcare systems' electronic portals are available to patients beginning at age 12, sometimes requiring that the patients themselves authorize their parents' access to the same information. In this article, we present a challenging case of protracted disagreement about an adolescent's right to honest information regarding his devastating prognosis. We then review the legal framework governing adolescents' rights to their own healthcare information, the limitations of ethics consultation to resolve such disputes, and the potential for the Cures Act's impact on electronic medical record systems to provide one form of resolution. We conclude that although parents in cases like the one presented here have the legal right to consent to medical treatment on their children's behalf, they do not have a corresponding right to direct the withholding of medical information from the patient.

当父母要求保密时:青少年获取其健康信息的权利及 21 世纪治愈法案最终规则的影响》。
摘要尽管广泛的伦理共识支持向年龄较大的儿童和青少年披露健康信息,但父母和照顾者要求不披露健康信息的情况仍给临床医生带来道德难题。在青少年的自主权、隐私权和保密权方面,各州的法律差异很大,许多州都没有明确规定青少年对自己健康信息的权利。21 世纪治愈法案》(21st Century Cures Act)要求通过电子门户网站随时向患者提供病历记录和检查结果,这引起了儿科医生和青少年医疗保健专业人员对保护青少年隐私和保密性的重要伦理关注。该法案对青少年获取其健康信息的影响却较少涉及,因为许多医疗系统的电子门户网站从患者 12 岁开始就可以使用,有时还要求患者本人授权其父母获取相同的信息。在这篇文章中,我们介绍了一个具有挑战性的案例,该案例涉及青少年在获得有关其毁灭性预后的真实信息的权利方面长期存在分歧。然后,我们回顾了有关青少年对其自身医疗信息的权利的法律框架、伦理咨询在解决此类争议方面的局限性,以及《治愈法案》对电子病历系统的影响可能提供的一种解决方式。我们的结论是,尽管在类似的案例中,父母在法律上有权代表他们的孩子同意接受治疗,但他们并没有相应的权利来指示不向病人提供医疗信息。
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来源期刊
Journal of Clinical Ethics
Journal of Clinical Ethics Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: The Journal of Clinical Ethics is written for and by physicians, nurses, attorneys, clergy, ethicists, and others whose decisions directly affect patients. More than 70 percent of the articles are authored or co-authored by physicians. JCE is a double-blinded, peer-reviewed journal indexed in PubMed, Current Contents/Social & Behavioral Sciences, the Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature, and other indexes.
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