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1. In “The Concept of Informed Consent,” Ruth Faden and Tom Beauchamp believe that the idea of informed consent

 

A. entails that the patient and physician “share decision-making.”

B. does not entail that the patient and physician “share decision-making.”

C. entails that the patient and physician never reach a decision together.

D. entails that the patient and physician always reach a decision together.

2. In “The Concept of Informed Consent,” Ruth Faden and Tom Beauchamp believe that the tendency to equate informed consent with shared decision-making is

 

A. irrelevant.

B. untimely.

C. confused.

D. rare.

3. Katz, in “Informed Consent—Must It Remain a Fairy Tale?,” says that the goal of joint decision-making between physicians and patients is

 

A. misguided.

B. unintelligible.

C. fulfilled in modern medicine.

D. still unfulfilled.

4. Katz, in “Informed Consent—Must It Remain a Fairy Tale?,” says that the most formidable obstacle to disclosure and consent is

 

A. medical technology.

B. bureaucratic regulations.

C. medical uncertainty.

D. poor decision-making skills.

5. To operationalize the best features of the conversation model in medical practice, according to “Transparency: Informed Consent in Primary Care,” Brody proposes the

 

A. transparency standard.

B. full disclosure standard.

C. legal standard.

D. bureaucratic standard.

6. According to Brody, in “Transparency: Informed Consent in Primary Care,” informed consent is still seen by physicians as

A. bureaucratic legalism.

B. an essential part of patient care.

C. a realistic and useful part of patient care.

D. a way to satisfy the low demand for information among patients.
 

SCIENCE
HEALTH SCIENCE
NURSING
BIOETHICS 23

 
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