I find that very encouraging. Thanks doc. May I ask, when did you first include checking pt consent forms had been given out? And why?
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Replying to @C7RKY
About 5 years or more ago. I suspect because it is a requirement of good consent practice to give a copy.
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Replying to @theveindoc
Where do you take your lead from these days for what represents good consent practice? I'm just looking to find anything that specifies the need to hand a copy to patient, or auditing the same.
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Replying to @C7RKY @theveindoc
Hi John take a look here https://www.rcseng.ac.uk/-/media/files/rcs/library-and-publications/non-journal-publications/consent_2016_combined-p2.pdf … see page 22
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Replying to @MarkCheetham @C7RKY
Ah thanks saved me looking it up Page 24 on my copy!
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Replying to @theveindoc @C7RKY
It's page no 22 but the 24th page. No pages ins at the intro
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Replying to @MarkCheetham @theveindoc
Thank you Mark. A Royal College document? I didn't expect that. How would this sit alongside guidance issued by the likes of GMC, DoH, etc? Is one considered the definitive source? Can't help note it says 'should' be given in that one too. Not even 'must'.
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Replying to @C7RKY @theveindoc
The royal college guidance is the most up to date (Current GMC and DOH guidance dates back to 2008 and 2009). I guess all guidance is should
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ZHH Multiple sources of "guidance" is no way to operate a safety-critical sector
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Agreed- although there isn’t always one best treatment. Having one healthcare regulator would be a start!!
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Amen to that!! Francis, anyone..?
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