Ethical issues in informed consent. Research on medical cost containment
D. M. Mahler, R. M. Veatch and V. W. Sidel
The decision to contain medical costs, which is a political and social
decision, entails restriction of medical services. To guide public policy,
research on the impact of such restriction must be carried out, but this
type of research differs significantly from most other medical research.
Difficult issues concerning informed consent arise, with potential
conflicts among principles of maximization of good and minimization of harm
to the patient, the patient's right to self-determination, and the
utilitarian goal of maximization of collective welfare. We have discussed
these principles in the context of relationships between patient and
physician and between subject and investigator. Approaches considered
include emphasis on retrospective studies, use of statistical techniques to
formulate clinical decision-making rules on the basis of available data,
three-celled randomization designs, and the role of the primary-care
physician in maximizing patient autonomy and minimizing the potentially
threatening aspects of informed consent for such studies.