J R Soc Med 2004;97:480-482
doi:10.1258/jrsm.97.10.480
© 2004 Royal Society of Medicine
Refusing treatmentplease see: an analysis of capacity assessments carried out by a liaison psychiatry service
Gopinath Ranjith MRCPsych 1
Matthew Hotopf PhD MRCPsych 2
1 Department of Psychological Medicine, Kings College Hospital,
London
2 Section of General Hospital Psychiatry, Division of Psychological Medicine,
Institute of Psychiatry, London SE5 8AF, UK
Correspondence to: Dr M Hotopf, Department of Psychological Medicine, 3rd
Floor, Weston Education Centre, Cutcombe Road, London SE5 9RJ, UK E-mail:
m.hotopf{at}iop.kcl.ac.uk
 |
SUMMARY
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The assessment of capacity to consent to a healthcare decision
is an
important part of day-to-day work in general hospitals.
The role of liaison
psychiatric services in assessment of capacity
has not been well studied in
British practice. We looked at
all such referrals (35) to a liaison
psychiatric service in
a teaching hospital in the course of one year.
The commonest referrals were regarding capacity to consent to a therapeutic
procedure, followed by post-discharge placement and ability to self-discharge.
Organic mental disorders were the most frequent cause of incapacity. 20 (57%)
of the referrals were for patients who had refused the intervention in
question, and in 12 of these the contentious issue was resolved.
Liaison psychiatric services can be useful not only in offering a second
opinion or clarifying the influence of psychopathology on decision-making
ability but also mediating between the patient and the clinical team.
 |
INTRODUCTION
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The assessment of capacity to consent to medical treatment has
become
increasingly relevant with the introduction of the Adults
with Incapacity
(Scotland) Act 2000 and the planned introduction
of the Capacity Act in
England and Wales. Many patients in general
hospitals lack capacity to consent
to treatments, although the
issue is infrequently
recognized.
1 The
assessment of mental
capacity is supposedly a core skill for all
postregistration
doctors but many seem to find it
difficult.
2 When
questions
about capacity to consent to a healthcare decision are raised
on
general hospital wards, liaison psychiatry services are often
involved.
Not many studies on capacity assessments have been conducted in general
hospitals by
psychiatrists.3,4
There are three situations where the liaison psychiatrist may be requested to
assess capacity(a) where there is a psychiatric disorder
influencing decision-making capacity; (b) where the referral is made
by the physician to avoid an adversarial relationship with the patient; and
(c) where the decision is so complex as to demand the skills of a
person expert in such
assessments.5
Looking at covert and overt aspects of capacity referrals, Umapathy et
al.6 in
Philadelphia suspected that capacity referrals are commonly disguised
referrals in cases where the medical team find it difficult to manage
patients. The issue deserves examination in British liaison psychiatric
practice since there is debate within the profession about the appropriateness
of such
consultations.7,8
 |
METHODS
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This was a case series conducted in the Department of Psychological
Medicine
at Kings College Hospital, a teaching hospital in South
London.
All psychiatric consultations conducted by the liaison psychiatry
service
where capacity to consent to a healthcare decision was assessed
were
recorded on a specially devised form. It contained sociodemographic
details,
reasons for referral, as well as details of capacity
assessment including the
three components of the legal definition
of capacitythe ability to
understand and retain information;
the ability to believe information; and the
ability to weigh
the information in balance. Most of the assessments were done
by
senior house officers in liaison psychiatry according to guidelines
suggested
by Appelbaum and
Grisso,
9 under the
supervision of a senior
psychiatrist.
 |
RESULTS
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35 cases were identified during one year. 57% of the patients
were male and
the median age was 58 (range 2689).
Table 1 gives the reasons for
referrals: in 40% the question related
to a therapeutic procedure, in 26% to
placement following discharge
and in 11% to the ability to self-discharge
against medical
advice. Of the 13 patients judged to lack capacity, 9 had an
organic
mental disorder, most commonly dementia.
Table 2 shows the concordance
of
capacity judgment between the medical team and the assessing
psychiatrist
in 31 patients for whom this information was available.
In the 23 cases where
both clinical teams reached a clear decision
about capacity, the overall
agreement was 83% with a kappa of
0.65 indicating good inter-rater
agreement.
Of the 35 referrals, only 20 (57%) were for patients who had refused the
proposed intervention. Of those 20, capacity was judged to be absent in 9 and
present in 8, judgment being deferred in 3. In 12 patients initially refusing
the proposed intervention, the contentious issue was resolved after the
psychosocial assessment, with either the patient agreeing to the intervention
or the team negotiating an option more acceptable to the patient.
 |
DISCUSSION
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This study was not an attempt to estimate the rates of capacity
referrals
and we did not include the referrals out of hours.
We acknowledge that some
consultations where the assessment
of capacity was not the main focus may have
slipped the net.
The low age of our sample reflects the fact that part of the
old-age
liaison service is delivered at a different site of the hospital
not
covered by this study.
We were able to identify three types of referrals. The first was where the
referring team had concluded that capacity was present but wanted a second
opinion. Such assessments may be requested even when the patient has not
refused the treatment or procedure in question. This was the case when the
procedure was one without a clear benefit to the person such as the donor in
live-donor liver transplantation. In the second type, the referring team had
no doubt about lack of capacity but a referral was made to back up this
assessment. This is likely to happen, for example, when there are placement
issues in a patient. The impetus for such referrals may come from agencies
such as the social services, which require a psychiatric opinion. The third
type was where the clinical team had a genuine doubt about capacity and wanted
the psychiatric team to clarify the issue.
Whereas many of the cases tested in the courts have been dramatic and
involved life and death decisions, most of our cases involved
routine medical procedures and aftercare issues where the stakes were lower.
In many cases, the issue was resolved or a negotiated decision was arrived at
after the assessment. While we are not able to demonstrate cause and effect,
the spirit of engagement and negotiation engendered by the psychiatric
assessment often seemed to contribute to a resolution.
Liaison psychiatric services can serve a useful function in assessment and
management of patients when questions are raised about capacity to consent to
a healthcare decision. The input may be in the form of a second opinion or a
comment on the contribution of psychiatric illness to decision-making ability;
but in some cases the psychiatrist acts as a mediator between the team and the
patient. For the best use of liaison psychiatry, which in most settings is a
scarce resource, explicit criteria for referral are desirable. The referring
team should try to present the information in a manner that enhances
comprehension,10
with a clearly formulated question that needs to be answered.
 |
Acknowledgments
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We thank all senior house officers and administrative staff
in the
Department of Psychological Medicine at Kings
College Hospital for
their help in collection of data.
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