Posted: | December 15, 2022 03:23 PM |
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From: | Representative Paul Schemel |
To: | All House members |
Subject: | Informed consent under MCare (Prior HB 1022) |
I plan to reintroduce legislation (Prior HB 1022) that seeks a legislative fix to address the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Medical Care Availability and Reduction of Error (MCare) Act regarding a physician’s ability to delegate the duty to obtain the informed consent of a patient prior to specified procedures. Under section 504 of MCare, a physician has a duty to obtain the informed consent of a patient or a patient’s authorized representative prior to conducting the following procedures: (1) Performing surgery, including the related administration of anesthesia. (2) Administering radiation or chemotherapy. (3) Administering a blood transfusion. (4) Inserting a surgical device or appliance. (5) Administering an experimental medication, using an experimental device or using an approved medication or device in an experimental manner. In June 2017, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled, in a 4-3 decision in the case of Shinal v. Toms, that physicians have a non-delegable duty under MCare to obtain a patient’s informed consent. Additionally, the Court ruled that communications between a physician’s qualified staff members and patients will no longer be admissible at trials as to the issue of whether the physician obtained informed consent. This ruling severely hampers the concept of team-based care and ignores the realities of present-day health care. It further takes away a physician’s medical expertise and judgment in determining how best to serve his or her patients. As the dissent noted, “For fear of legal liability, physicians now must be involved with every aspect of informing their patients’ consent, thus delaying seriously ill patients access to physicians and the critical services that they provide.” Shinal v. Toms, 162 A.3d 429, 459 (Pa. 2017) (Baer, J., dissenting). This ruling now precludes health care facilities and physicians from utilizing qualified practitioners in the informed consent process, which means that qualified staff can no longer assist with providing information, answering questions, or following up with patients prior to surgical procedures for fear of legal liability. This ruling inhibits much of the team-based care that facilities and physicians rely on in an ever-demanding health care world. My legislation will:
Physicians are highly valued members of the medical community. While they should be held to very high standards, we must provide them with the ability to determine when to employ the assistance of other qualified practitioners within a framework that still ensures patients are protected and have access to information they need to make informed decisions about very important health care matters. Please join me in sponsoring this important piece of legislation that will reinstate a team-based approach to health care and ensure that physicians and other health care practitioners can focus more time on patient care and provide patients access to physicians and the critical services they provide. |