HHS Issues Guidance to Teaching Hospitals and Medical Schools on Informed Consent Requirements
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has written to the nation’s teaching hospitals and medical schools to clarify the requirement to obtain informed consent from patients before they are subjected to sensitive examinations, especially on patients under anesthesia.
HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra, Office for Civil Rights Director Melanie Fontes Rainer, and CMS administrator Chiquita Brooks-LaSure explained in the letter that they are aware of media reports and medical and scientific literature that indicate that as part of the training of medical students, patients are subjected to sensitive and intimate examinations – including pelvic, breast, prostate, or rectal examinations – while under anesthesia, when proper informed consent has not been obtained from the patients.
The letter stresses that it is vital for hospitals and medical schools to obtain and document informed consent before examinations are performed and that informed consent is required in all circumstances. Patients have the right to refuse to have sensitive examinations performed for teaching purposes and can refuse to consent to previously unagreed examinations while under anesthesia. The CMS has issued new guidance that clarifies the requirements of the Hospital Conditions of Participation with respect to the CMS’s revision of its hospital interpretive guidance about informed consent.
OCR has also stressed that under the HIPAA Privacy Rule, patients have the right to restrict who can access their PHI, including in situations where they may be unconscious while having a medical procedure performed. OCR has provided a Q&A that explains this HIPAA Privacy Rule right with respect to examinations by medical students while under anesthesia, and subsequent examinations when the covered entity has agreed to restrict disclosures of PHI.
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