Ethics, Communication, And Special Populations
Help Questions
USMLE Step 2 CK › Ethics, Communication, And Special Populations
Which of the following is the most appropriate next step in management?
Formally assess the patient's decision-making capacity.
Consult the hospital ethics committee.
Provide palliative care as the patient has refused definitive treatment.
Proceed with the surgery based on the proxy's consent.
Explanation
The correct answer is to formally assess the patient's decision-making capacity. Before overriding a patient's refusal of treatment, it is essential to determine if they lack capacity. Capacity assessment involves evaluating the patient's ability to communicate a choice, understand relevant information, appreciate the situation and its consequences, and reason about treatment options. Given his dementia and lack of appreciation for the risks, it is likely he lacks capacity, but this must be formally established before involving the proxy or ethics committee. Proceeding with surgery without a capacity assessment would violate the patient's autonomy. Consulting ethics is premature before capacity is determined. Palliative care may eventually be appropriate, but not before confirming the patient's refusal is based on a capacitous decision.
Which of the following is the most important ethical consideration for the transplant committee when evaluating this patient?
Her likelihood of maintaining sobriety and adhering to post-transplant medical care.
Her age compared to other candidates on the transplant list.
Her socioeconomic status and ability to pay for post-transplant medications.
Whether her liver disease was self-inflicted.
Explanation
The primary ethical principle in allocating scarce resources like organs is medical utility—that is, maximizing the chances of a successful outcome. For a patient with a history of substance use, the key factor is the likelihood of post-transplant success, which is heavily dependent on maintaining sobriety and adhering to a complex medical regimen. A return to drinking could destroy the new organ. The cause of her liver failure (self-inflicted vs. not) is not considered an ethical criterion for allocation, as this would be unfairly punitive. Ability to pay (social justice) and age are secondary considerations to the overall likelihood of a good outcome.
Which of the following is the physician's most appropriate action?
Inform him that due to the risk, you must immediately tell his parents.
Honor his request for confidentiality and begin treatment without parental involvement.
Arrange for immediate psychiatric hospitalization to ensure his safety.
Assess the acuity of his suicide risk and work with him to find a way to involve his parents.
Explanation
The best approach balances confidentiality with safety and the need for parental involvement in a minor's care. The first step is a thorough suicide risk assessment. Since he denies active intent or plan, immediate hospitalization or breaking confidentiality without discussion is likely not warranted. The most therapeutic approach is to validate his feelings, explain why parental involvement is crucial for his treatment and safety, and collaborate with him on how to best approach his parents. This builds trust while ensuring necessary support systems are activated. Treating a minor for depression without parental consent is generally not permissible, except in very specific circumstances.
Which of the following communication techniques is most effective for initiating this conversation?
Ask the patient and his parents what they understand about what has been happening.
Provide several pamphlets and websites about the illness for them to review first.
Start by describing the pharmacology of antipsychotic medications.
State the diagnosis clearly at the beginning of the meeting to avoid confusion.
Explanation
The most effective technique for breaking bad news is to first assess the recipients' understanding and perception of the situation, often summarized by the phrase 'ask before you tell.' This allows the physician to gauge their level of knowledge, identify any misconceptions, and tailor the delivery of the information to their current understanding. It is a patient-centered approach that promotes a stronger therapeutic alliance. Starting with medication, stating the diagnosis bluntly without context, or handing out materials before discussion are all less effective and can be overwhelming or alienating.
Which of the following is the most appropriate immediate action?
Notify Child Protective Services and discharge the mother with a safety plan.
Separate the mother and infant and allow the mother to be discharged to her husband's care.
Prescribe an oral antipsychotic and arrange for outpatient follow-up in 24 hours.
Arrange for immediate inpatient psychiatric hospitalization of the mother.
Explanation
This patient is presenting with postpartum psychosis, a psychiatric emergency. Her command hallucinations and delusions involving the infant, coupled with a specific plan to harm the baby, indicate an immediate and high risk to the infant's safety. The only safe and appropriate action is immediate inpatient psychiatric hospitalization, which may need to be on an involuntary basis, to ensure the safety of both mother and child and to initiate treatment. All other options fail to adequately address the acute risk of infanticide.
Which of the following is the psychiatrist's most immediate ethical and legal responsibility?
Instruct the patient to go to the nearest emergency department.
Call 911 and provide the patient's current location to local emergency services.
End the video call due to practicing across state lines without a license.
Contact the patient's emergency contact on file.
Explanation
The patient is showing signs of a life-threatening opioid overdose. The physician's immediate duty to protect the patient from harm supersedes licensing and jurisdictional issues in an emergency. The most direct and effective action is to activate emergency medical services in the patient's location. While contacting an emergency contact or instructing the patient may be helpful, they are not reliable or rapid enough given the risk of respiratory arrest. Ending the call would be patient abandonment in a critical situation.
Which of the following is the most appropriate communication strategy?
Explain that in his culture, emotional distress often presents as physical symptoms.
Tell him that since there is no medical cause, his symptoms are likely psychological.
Prescribe a low-dose antidepressant and label it as a 'nerve tonic.'
Refer him directly to a psychiatrist for evaluation of depression.
Explanation
The correct answer is to provide culturally sensitive psychoeducation. Many cultures, particularly from East Asia, somatize psychological distress due to the stigma associated with mental illness. Explaining this link in a respectful, non-judgmental way can help the patient understand the mind-body connection and be more receptive to treatment. Direct referral to psychiatry might be perceived as dismissive of his physical symptoms. Telling him his symptoms are 'psychological' can be invalidating. Prescribing medication under a false premise is deceptive and ethically problematic.
Which of the following is the psychiatrist's most ethically appropriate response?
Explore the meaning of the invitation as a form of transference.
Suggest they meet for coffee in a few months to see how he is doing.
Gently decline, explaining that a personal relationship would be inappropriate due to their prior therapeutic roles.
Accept the invitation to provide closure for the patient.
Explanation
The most ethical response is to maintain professional boundaries, even after therapy has concluded. The power imbalance and transference dynamics inherent in the therapeutic relationship do not simply disappear at the last session. Engaging in a social or romantic relationship (a dual relationship) with a former patient is unethical and can be harmful. The psychiatrist should gently but clearly decline while acknowledging the patient's gratitude. While transference may be at play, exploring it deeply in the final moments of the last session is less important than clearly and respectfully reinforcing the professional boundary.
Which of the following is the most appropriate action for the physician?
Prescribe the contraceptives and maintain the patient's confidentiality.
Inform the parents of their daughter's request.
Insist on a joint counseling session with the patient and her parents.
Refuse to prescribe until she obtains parental consent.
Explanation
The correct answer is to prescribe the contraceptives and maintain confidentiality. In most jurisdictions, minors who are deemed mature enough to understand the nature and consequences of medical treatment for sensitive issues like contraception, STIs, pregnancy, and substance abuse can provide their own consent. This is known as the 'mature minor' doctrine. Given that the patient understands the risks and benefits, she has the right to confidential care. Informing the parents or requiring their consent would violate her confidentiality and could create a barrier to her receiving necessary medical care. Insisting on counseling could also be a barrier and is not required if the patient has capacity to consent.
Which of the following is the psychiatrist's most appropriate next course of action?
Warn the ex-wife of the threat and notify law enforcement.
Maintain patient confidentiality as the statement was made in therapy.
Increase the frequency of the patient's therapy sessions to de-escalate him.
Initiate involuntary commitment proceedings for the patient.
Explanation
The correct answer is to warn the potential victim and notify law enforcement. This situation invokes the 'Tarasoff duty to protect,' which is a legal and ethical obligation that overrides patient confidentiality when a patient makes a specific, credible threat against an identifiable third party. The psychiatrist has a duty to take reasonable steps to protect the intended victim. While involuntary commitment might be considered, the immediate duty is to protect the potential victim. Increasing therapy sessions is insufficient given the specificity and credibility of the threat. Maintaining confidentiality would be a breach of the duty to protect.