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Title of the item:

Financial Decision-Making Capacity and Patient-Centered Discharge.

Title:
Financial Decision-Making Capacity and Patient-Centered Discharge.
Authors:
Mendola A; Director of Clinical Ethics and Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, University of Tennessee Graduate School of Medicine, Knoxville, Tennessee USA. .
Source:
The Journal of clinical ethics [J Clin Ethics] 2020 Summer; Vol. 31 (2), pp. 178-183.
Publication Type:
Journal Article
Language:
English
Imprint Name(s):
Publication: 2023- : Chicago : University of Chicago Press
Original Publication: Frederick, MD : Published for the Journal of Clinical Ethics, Inc. by University Pub. Group, c1990-
MeSH Terms:
Decision Making*
Financing, Personal*
Mental Competency*
Patient Discharge*
Patient-Centered Care*/economics
Clinical Decision-Making ; Humans ; Personal Autonomy
Entry Date(s):
Date Created: 20200626 Date Completed: 20200914 Latest Revision: 20200914
Update Code:
20240105
PMID:
32585663
Academic Journal
An ethically sound discharge from the hospital can be impeded by a number of factors, including a lack of payor for a patient's care, a lack of appropriate discharge options, and a lack of authority to sign a patient into a long-term facility. In some cases, the primary barrier involves the patient's lack of financial decision-making capacity. When a patient's income comes primarily from government assistance, financial decision making is connected to both the individual's well-being and to fair allocation of resources. Taking away another person's financial independence is a substantial intrusion on autonomy and should not be considered lightly. However, poor management of funds can lead to homelessness, medical noncompliance, vulnerability to financial exploitation, and other threats to human flourishing. As with medical decision-making capacity, poor decisions alone do not invalidate an individual's right to self-determination. And as with medical decision-making capacity, such determinations should not be made ad hoc or be capricious, but should rely on sound assessment criteria. When there are justified concerns that a patient may be vulnerable due to limited financial decision-making capacity, an evaluation should be completed and a surrogate payee be sought, when appropriate.
(Copyright 2020 The Journal of Clinical Ethics. All rights reserved.)

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