Although
advances in surgical techniques, training, anesthesia, instruments,
diagnostic equipment have greatly reduces the mortality associated with a
surgery, every surgery carries a risk of death.
Death
associated with anesthetic procedures is 1-4 deaths per 10,000 anesthesia. The in-hospital mortality rates for hip fractures range
from 1-10%. In patients undergoing cardiac bypass surgery, mortality is
2-5% for all patients and about 1% for the lowest-risk elective
patients. As per the American College of Surgeons, one of 1,000 patients
die during a cholecystectomy. Mortality in hysterectomy from 0.6 to 1.6
per 1000 procedures. Post-appendectomy mortality rate at 30 days is
reported to be 2.1 per 1000.
Several
factors affect the risk of death. These may be related to the surgical
procedure itself, anesthesia, drugs, age of the patient, general
condition of the patient, medical history of the patient
(co-morbidities), the type of surgery, experience of the surgeon
performing the surgery. Factors like what day of the week the surgery is
done or time of surgery, whether night time or during the day also
influence the risk of death. Evidence has shown that patients who
undergo surgery over the weekend or at night have a greater likelihood
of dying after the surgery.
Patients
undergoing surgery can be categorized as low risk patients whose
estimated risk of death is less than 1% and high risk patients, whose
estimated risk of death is more than 1%.
No
surgery therefore can be said to be risk-free. There is always a risk
of death in every surgical procedure, even in a minor surgery.
Patients
today are more informed and when they consult a surgeon for an elective
surgery, they are also well-prepared with list of related questions
addressing their concerns including the chances of death with the
proposed procedure.
The
doctor is bound to inform the patient and the family about the risk of
death with the surgery (along with other relevant information), even if
the patient is low-risk. This enables patients to make informed decision
about whether they should avoid the surgery or choose to undergo the
procedure, whether the benefits of the surgery are worth the risks.
The
Montgomery judgement of the UK Supreme Court precisely addressed this
aspect of informed consent, when it ruled that the doctor has a duty “to
ensure that the patient is aware of any material risks involved in any
recommended treatment, and of any reasonable alternative or variant
treatments”. Material risk is the risk which a reasonable person would consider significant or a risk which a doctor knows (or should reasonably know) that the patient would consider it to be significant. The judgement further said, “the “therapeutic exception” is not intended to enable doctors to prevent their patients from taking an informed decision. Rather, it is the doctor’s
responsibility to explain to her patient why she considers that one of
the available treatment options is medically preferable to the others,
having taken care to ensure that her patient is aware of the
considerations for and against each of them.”
Dr KK Aggarwal
Padma Shri AwardeeVice President CMAAOGroup Editor-in-Chief IJCP Publications
President Heart Care Foundation of India
Immediate Past National President IMA
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