In this video, Cathy teaches the concepts of informed consent and nursing ethical principles as they pertain to the mental healthcare setting. Both of these concepts are covered in your Fundamentals of Nursing material, but it's important to know and consider them from the mental healthcare perspective as well, because in this setting you will be presented with some unique challenges
This series follows along with our Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Flashcards which are intended to help RN and PN nursing students study for nursing school exams, including the ATI, HESI, and NCLEX.
Psychiatric Mental Health - Nursing Flashcards
Informed Consent
Informed consent is the patient's voluntary decision to undergo a procedure or intervention
Informed consent is something that you will need to know about in your Fundamentals of Nursing course, which is why we cover it in our Fundamentals of Nursing Flashcards as well as in our Fundamentals series article on Informed Consent and the Right to Refuse. But, informed consent is also important to consider from the psychiatric mental health perspective.
Some of the mental health disorders and conditions that you will learn about throughout your Psychiatric Mental Health studies, like schizophrenia, could make a patient not competent to give informed consent.
Provider's role
When obtaining informed consent, the provider's role is to explain the nature of the procedure, risks and benefits of the procedure, alternatives to the procedure, as well as any risks and benefits of those alternatives. The provider will also assess the patient's understanding of the information.
If a patient has questions about the procedure even after they have already given consent, the provider must be contacted to answer those questions. As a nurse, you can reinforce the provider's teaching, but you would not be the one to answer questions about the procedure for the purposes of informed consent.
Nurse's role
When obtaining informed consent, the nurse's role is to sign the informed consent form as a witness, confirm that the patient received and understands the procedure information, ensure the patient is competent and gave consent voluntarily.
Documentation
All elements of informed consent must be documented on a form or in the patient's medical record.
Who can give informed consent in the mental health setting?
Patients under the influence of drugs or alcohol, or patients with dementia, delirium, or schizophrenia may NOT be competent to provide consent.
Schizophrenia, as well as the difference between dementia and delirium, are covered in the disorders section of our Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Flashcards. These flashcards are purpose-built to help you learn and retain key points about these disorders for your mental health classes and exams.
As a general rule, a patient needs to be 18 years old or older to give informed consent, however, many states give minors the right to consent to treatment if they are emancipated, married, in the military, or require substance abuse or mental health treatment. Since mental health treatment is one of these exceptions in many states, you will likely encounter more minors who have given informed consent when you are learning or working in a mental health/psychiatric setting or unit.
Even after consent has been obtained, the patient has the right to change their mind and decline treatment.
Nursing ethical principles
Having ethical principles in nursing help guide us to choose and differentiate between right and wrong, or behavior that's correct and incorrect.
The ethical principles underlying good nursing practice are foundational knowledge that will support your whole nursing education and nursing career, which is why it's usually covered in your Fundamentals of Nursing or intro nursing classes (and why we cover it in our Fundamentals of Nursing Flashcards as well as in our Fundamentals series article on The Nursing Profession and Ethics). But, ethical principles are also very important to consider from the psychiatric mental health perspective. Why? Because you might encounter more stressful or ethically unclear situations in the mental health setting.
The principles we've summarized here are Autonomy, Beneficence, Nonmaleficence, Justice, Fidelity, Advocacy, and Veracity.
Autonomy
Autonomy as a nursing principle is your patient's right to make their own healthcare decisions. This is the principle underlying informed consent, the right to refuse, the patient self-determination act, and many more.
For example, in the psychiatric mental health setting, you would practice autonomy by respecting a patient's right to refuse their medication.
Beneficence
Beneficence as a nursing principle means to promote good. You can easily decode this term if you know that the prefix bene- means good (it's the same root as Bueno in spanish, Bien in French, and the word beneficial!).
We created our Medical Terminology flashcards to make breaking down words into their parts easy, so you never have to be confused by an unfamiliar word on an exam!
For example, in the psychiatric mental health setting, in practicing beneficence you might provide a quiet space and remain with an anxious patient.
Nonmaleficence
Nonmaleficence as a nursing principle means to avoid causing harm.
For example, you perform multiple checks when giving a medication to avoid medication errors.
Justice
Justice as a nursing principle means to treat your patients fairly and equally—distributing your care equitably among assigned patients.
This might sound pretty straightforward. But in the psychiatric mental health setting, you might have a patient with a particular personality disorder or behavioral abnormality. As Cathy notes in this video, it's possible that it could get under your skin or cause you distress, and it may feel difficult to spend the time you need to with that patient. But as a nurse, you should recognize your own feelings regarding that patient, and in the end, you do need to distribute care equitably, despite those challenges.
In the video where Cathy teaches the concepts of Nurse/Client Relationship and Therapeutic Communication from our flashcards, she provides an example of swapping care of a particular patient with her colleague who was having a difficult time with a patient because of a countertransference situation. Cathy and her colleague working together were able to ensure that patience received just care in that situation that was difficult for the nurse.
Fidelity
Fidelity as a nursing principle means to be faithful and loyal; to keep promises you have made to your patients.
Advocacy
Advocacy as a nursing principle means to promote and protect the patient's rights, health and safety. This is something you will do all the time as a nurse. You are next to the patient, caring for the patient, and know the patient better than anyone else on the healthcare team. You will do this on a regular basis every shift that you work!
For example, if you see something concerning or an alarming condition come up with your patient, you would reach out to the provider and get that patient the help they need.
Veracity
Veracity as a nursing principle simply means to tell the truth. You should be honest with patients about, for example, possible side effects of a medication.
As another example, the nursing communication technique of presenting reality is a way that we practice veracity. In the mental healthcare setting, if you had a patient who says that they're hearing voices, you would acknowledge that they are hearing voices, but you don't want to validate that there are voices.
If a patient asks if a procedure will be painful, and you know that it is, you would not lie and say that it is not.