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Had a situation the other night and thought it would make a good learning point.
A patient who was in the ED for "severe" abdominal pain pending CT scan became angry that the nurse would not let them eat the big fried dinner brought to them by their family. Nurses always turf these issues to the doctors. I sent her back with the usual "I recommend against eating. They are an adult and can do as they wish." And the patient demanded to see me. I explained that since they came to the ER, by ambulance for a presumed life threatening condition eating could kill them outright or delay any life saving surgery. The patient told me to go have autonomous marital relations and started eating. I told the nurse to have him sign an AMA form. This is where it got interesting.
The nurse came back and said the patient had refused to leave. I said I didn't want him to leave. I just wanted him to sign an AMA form about eating and for him to get the CT scan. She told me that if he signed AMA he would have to leave. I tried to explain that this was not true but she was convinced somewhere along the line that AMA is an absolute, you sign this you're out the door proposition.
That is not correct.
A patient can refuse any aspect of treatment. That does not mean that they must refuse all treatment. In this case this patient who was a jerk but did have capacity could refuse to remain NPO but could continue with the rest of the work up. I asked that he sign the AMA form about that specific refusal to go along with my note about it.
So the take home point is a patient can refuse specific aspects of care without refusing everything and without leaving the ED or hospital. They can be asked to sign an AMA form to refuse that aspect of care and that doesn't mean their visit is over. No matter what they sign your note about their informed refusal is the most important aspect of the interaction.
A patient who was in the ED for "severe" abdominal pain pending CT scan became angry that the nurse would not let them eat the big fried dinner brought to them by their family. Nurses always turf these issues to the doctors. I sent her back with the usual "I recommend against eating. They are an adult and can do as they wish." And the patient demanded to see me. I explained that since they came to the ER, by ambulance for a presumed life threatening condition eating could kill them outright or delay any life saving surgery. The patient told me to go have autonomous marital relations and started eating. I told the nurse to have him sign an AMA form. This is where it got interesting.
The nurse came back and said the patient had refused to leave. I said I didn't want him to leave. I just wanted him to sign an AMA form about eating and for him to get the CT scan. She told me that if he signed AMA he would have to leave. I tried to explain that this was not true but she was convinced somewhere along the line that AMA is an absolute, you sign this you're out the door proposition.
That is not correct.
A patient can refuse any aspect of treatment. That does not mean that they must refuse all treatment. In this case this patient who was a jerk but did have capacity could refuse to remain NPO but could continue with the rest of the work up. I asked that he sign the AMA form about that specific refusal to go along with my note about it.
So the take home point is a patient can refuse specific aspects of care without refusing everything and without leaving the ED or hospital. They can be asked to sign an AMA form to refuse that aspect of care and that doesn't mean their visit is over. No matter what they sign your note about their informed refusal is the most important aspect of the interaction.

