Transparency and Duty of Candour
Cross-source consensus on Transparency and Duty of Candour from 1 sources and 5 claims.
1 sources · 5 claims
How it works
Benefits
Risks & contraindications
Highlighted claims
- Healthcare professionals have an ethical duty of candour to be open about care, particularly when a patient has died. — Enhancing communication with bereaved relatives about emergency and critical care trials (ENHANCE): a mixed-methods study
- Bereaved relatives who discover research participation unexpectedly in medical records may experience increased distress and reduced trust in clinicians. — Enhancing communication with bereaved relatives about emergency and critical care trials (ENHANCE): a mixed-methods study
- Offering relatives a choice about receiving information is suggested as a way to protect trust while avoiding unwanted disclosure. — Enhancing communication with bereaved relatives about emergency and critical care trials (ENHANCE): a mixed-methods study
- Without openness about research participation, relatives may suspect that clinicians are hiding information or misjudge the significance of the research. — Enhancing communication with bereaved relatives about emergency and critical care trials (ENHANCE): a mixed-methods study
- Automatic disclosure of research participation without prior consent carries a risk of adding distress to an already intense bereavement experience. — Enhancing communication with bereaved relatives about emergency and critical care trials (ENHANCE): a mixed-methods study