"Patient is 'In DUE' capacity" -Informed (info provided to patient) -Decides (decision is expressed) -Understands (able to relay info provided) -Explains (reasoning behind decision)
Honestly i love you sooo much Dirty Medicine!!!! Supporting your Patreon when I get my summer paycheck **big hugs** I also cannot express how much i appreciate the intonation, it makes all the difference!!
I'm no longer on Patreon but if you do ever want to support the channel, please do so by clicking JOIN to be a Dirty Medicine member. It's the same thing as Patreon but its directly through TH-cam
@@DirtyMedicine Okay hi me again, came back to this vid. Sooooo if a person if found to not have capacity and then is found to have capacity 30 mins later (example in the high yield section at the end), is that the same as them changing their mind? Or would it be more along the lines of them not being able to communicate their decision clearly/not understanding their illness/unable to explain etc, then being able to 30mins later (first scenario, has capacity), whereas the constant changing of decision would flat out be no capacity?
I suppose I'm wondering that what if they communicated a clear decision, and then changed their mind on the decision 30 mins later.... where does that fall in?
I have used LUCK as the mnemonic in the past: L: logical and linear though pattern U: understanding of the outcomes of their decision C: Communicates Choice Consistently K: Knowledge of their situation and condition
Capacitance is used in medical contexts and competence is used in legal contexts. The key difference is that in capacity, the person has to hold or retain information and weigh the pros and cons, as over here the judge is the patient. So, in maths, capacity means the ability to hold a particular volume, and in physics, capacitance means the ability to hold charge. So in capacity, the patient has to hold the information. In English, if a person is incapacitated, they should first go and seek a doctor. Competence is not about holding the information but about having a back-and-forth conversation with the judge. The judge will retain or hold the information and weigh the pros and cons. 🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌
The example for criteria number 1 - is it right to threaten the patient with the consequences of leaving the hospital? Or does it apply only in situations like non complaince??
Hi question, when asking the patient what might happen if you leave ?? and they use the exact same phrase repetitively ..... Would this mean that they don't have capacity ?
can someone explain me the last slide where the first point says it can change decision to decision.....and last line that says changing there mind arent they the same thing?? please some one explain me
Do you have a video regarding organ transplant? Which patient is more eligible for an organ compared to another? Is there any order of priority or certain conditions that would not allow a patient to receive an organ?
In the example that was given in the beginning, the 55 year old with schizophrenia and diagnosed with pneumonia, does he have capacity? Because near the end of the of the video it was mentioned that he has capacity and I really wanted to confirm.
Yes, this patient has the capacity because he fulfills the criteria of understanding, appreciating, coming to the decision in a logical manner and is able to communicate his final choice.
For EDUCATIONAL purposes only. Not to be used as medical, legal, or other advice!
"Patient is 'In DUE' capacity"
-Informed (info provided to patient)
-Decides (decision is expressed)
-Understands (able to relay info provided)
-Explains (reasoning behind decision)
I love this mnemonic more than the video's mnemonic. Thanks a lot!
ICAL: I Can Appreciate Logic (Informed, Communicates Decision, Appreciates Severity, Logical Reasoning)
Honestly i love you sooo much Dirty Medicine!!!! Supporting your Patreon when I get my summer paycheck **big hugs** I also cannot express how much i appreciate the intonation, it makes all the difference!!
I'm no longer on Patreon but if you do ever want to support the channel, please do so by clicking JOIN to be a Dirty Medicine member. It's the same thing as Patreon but its directly through TH-cam
@@DirtyMedicine Great to know thank you!!
@@DirtyMedicine Okay hi me again, came back to this vid. Sooooo if a person if found to not have capacity and then is found to have capacity 30 mins later (example in the high yield section at the end), is that the same as them changing their mind? Or would it be more along the lines of them not being able to communicate their decision clearly/not understanding their illness/unable to explain etc, then being able to 30mins later (first scenario, has capacity), whereas the constant changing of decision would flat out be no capacity?
I suppose I'm wondering that what if they communicated a clear decision, and then changed their mind on the decision 30 mins later.... where does that fall in?
@@ajaffs17 i think changing their mind = no capacity
Best Mnemonic of all time:
ARE U sure you have capacity?
Appreciation
Reasoning
Expressing a decision
Understanding
I have used LUCK as the mnemonic in the past:
L: logical and linear though pattern
U: understanding of the outcomes of their decision
C: Communicates Choice Consistently
K: Knowledge of their situation and condition
Thank You Dirty, we really appreciate you
Earlier ethics and communication skills were too difficult for me,thank u so much for these wonderful videos....kudos to ur hardwork...!
thank you for ACTUALLY explaining the difference between capacity and competence
Capacitance is used in medical contexts and competence is used in legal contexts.
The key difference is that in capacity, the person has to hold or retain information and weigh the pros and cons, as over here the judge is the patient. So, in maths, capacity means the ability to hold a particular volume, and in physics, capacitance means the ability to hold charge. So in capacity, the patient has to hold the information. In English, if a person is incapacitated, they should first go and seek a doctor.
Competence is not about holding the information but about having a back-and-forth conversation with the judge. The judge will retain or hold the information and weigh the pros and cons.
🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌🙌
Is there any PDF notes someone made for later review?
Thank you so much🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 exam in 2 weeks🤞🏻
How did it go? Mine is in 2 days!
@@brandonvelazquez557 How did it go? mine in 4 days!
Ну что сдали?
@@EissaProd уже сматчилась😄
@@Katerina_kearns поздравляяю 😄 я готовлюсь к первому степу и меня мотивирует ваш успех
11:08 'i c a l' I can absolutely leave!
The example for criteria number 1 - is it right to threaten the patient with the consequences of leaving the hospital? Or does it apply only in situations like non complaince??
This is gold. Thank you!
I'm also guilty of mixing the two. This really helped me to make the distinction 😊👌
Thank you man!!! I appreciate ur efforts.
Hi question, when asking the patient what might happen if you leave ?? and they use the exact same phrase repetitively ..... Would this mean that they don't have capacity ?
“Dirty ethics” love the name
can someone explain me the last slide where the first point says it can change decision to decision.....and last line that says changing there mind arent they the same thing?? please some one explain me
Thanks!
thanks a lot very nice and informative , really easy to digest
Do you have a video regarding organ transplant? Which patient is more eligible for an organ compared to another? Is there any order of priority or certain conditions that would not allow a patient to receive an organ?
chance of good prognosis
Thank you
what does "codes" mean?
Goes into cardiac arrest
thanks!
Really helpful !!! 👍
In the example that was given in the beginning, the 55 year old with schizophrenia and diagnosed with pneumonia, does he have capacity? Because near the end of the of the video it was mentioned that he has capacity and I really wanted to confirm.
Yes, this patient has the capacity because he fulfills the criteria of understanding, appreciating, coming to the decision in a logical manner and is able to communicate his final choice.
Omggg patient act stupid hahahhahaha that was so cute omgg 👍🏻🙌🏻
Medical ethics questions are HARD! Thank you for these videos.
Great