Capacity: Difference between revisions
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==Application== | ==Application== | ||
* | *For medical consent, does the patient have the ability to: | ||
**Communicate | **Communicate | ||
**Understand the medical procedure | **Understand the medical procedure | ||
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**Voluntarily consent? | **Voluntarily consent? | ||
**Give consent because he or she is competent? | **Give consent because he or she is competent? | ||
==Also See== | ==Also See== | ||
Revision as of 11:16, 5 July 2015
Background
- Capacity is the ability to understand the nature and effect of one’s acts
- May have capacity in one moment and lack capacity in another
- Does the patient have the ability to understand the nature and effect of his or her acts in a specific moment in time?
- The level of capacity needed to enter into legal documents, such as a durable power of attorney, contract, or a will, differs based upon the type of transaction
- Use to consent to medical procedures
- Mini mental status exam (MMSE) <19 are correlated with lack of capacity
Application
- For medical consent, does the patient have the ability to:
- Communicate
- Understand the medical procedure
- Understand a description of the procedure, its risks, its benefits, and its alternatives?
- Voluntarily consent?
- Give consent because he or she is competent?
