The Disability Guys Pennsylvania Logo
FREE CASE CONSULTATIONS
(877) 996-5837
You Only Pay If We Win
Injured? Disabled? Unable to Keep Working?

ARE YOUR READY TO GET YOUR LIFE BACK?

Informed Consent: Lawsuits For Undisclosed Medical Risks

Informed consent is a critical medical principle. All patients have a basic right to understand the complications and risks of the medical procedures they undergo.

  • Were you or a loved one misled about the risks of a medical procedure?
  • Did you suffer severe injuries?
  • Financial compensation may be available

Our experienced medical malpractice attorneys can help. Find more information in a free consultation.

As a medical patient, you have the right to make personal decisions about your health. In both moral and legal terms, you are an autonomous agent – entitled to make decisions on your own behalf free from interference. Informed consent laws, passed and enforced by state governments, are designed to protect this concept of patient autonomy and allow patients to make the best decisions for their future.

Medical Consent Laws In Pennsylvania

In Pennsylvania, doctors suggest the treatments they think would work best for a patient. Patients, on the other hand, choose to undergo diagnostic tests and procedures. To meet legal and ethical standards, state laws agree that patients must give their voluntary informed consent to most forms of medical treatment, including diagnostic tests and procedures.

The vast majority of state-level informed consent laws recognize that educating a patient fully is a formal precondition for consent. To comply with this requirement, physicians must adequately inform patients of the benefits and risks of a medical procedure, along with alternative treatment options. When doctors fail to uphold this obligation, and patients develop an undisclosed risk or side effect, the affected individuals may be able to secure financial compensation.

NO WIN. NO FEE. GET YOUR FREE CONSULTATION
(877) 996-5837

The Basics Of Informed Consent

Consent, in the modern world, requires both ability and freedom.

To make the best decision about their own care, patients must be able to make the decision. In this context, ability is a function of information and understanding. You can’t truly consent to a treatment if you don’t know anything about it. That’s why medical professionals refer to informed consent, rather than consent alone. The only way to consent freely to a treatment is through adequate information. Likewise, you can’t truly use the information presented until you actually understand it. Informing is something that doctors do, but understanding is something that patients do. As a result, informed consent implies two corresponding duties:

  • physicians must inform their patients of benefits, risks and alternatives
  • patients must ask for clarification when they don’t understand the presented information

Informed consent always entails freedom of choice. It must be voluntary. You can’t feel pressured or coerced into taking a drug or undergoing surgery. Your consent to treatment is a choice that you make because you believe, truly believe, that the treatment is a good option for you.

Speak Up In Medical Consultations

A doctor’s disclosure must be communicated in language that the patient can understand. Highly-technical terms should be avoided or, alternatively, explained clearly. A patient’s primary language should also be taken into account. When English isn’t the patient’s first language, a translator may be required.

Like any process of education, informed consent shifts certain obligations to the “student.” Patients should speak up when a detail doesn’t make sense. In most cases, doctors will assume that, when patients don’t ask for clarification, they understand the procedure or drug. Mind-reading is not in the normal physician’s toolbox.

Two Legal Theories Of Doctor Disclosure

What constitutes adequate disclosure? States take one of two avenues on this question. Most states, according to Bryan Liang, MD, a professor of healthcare law at the University of Houston, use a provider-centered standard – doctors should give their patients all the information that a reasonable healthcare professional would provide under similar circumstances.

A minority of states, including Pennsylvania, use a patient-centered standard – doctors should give their patients all the information that a reasonable patient would require to make an informed treatment decision. Again, this is the standard considered in Pennsylvania’s courts.

Necessary Information

While each standard is shaped by its own nuances, both provider-centered and patient-centered disclosure require physicians to cover the same basic categories of information before a treatment can be started:

  • the patient’s diagnosis
  • the goal of treatment and probability of success
  • the risks posed by treatment
  • alternatives to the proposed treatment, even when the doctor feels that these alternatives would be inappropriate (poorly-substantiated “alternative” treatments need not be covered)
  • the risks and benefits of refusing treatment

There are some facts that doctors don’t usually have to disclose, even though they are true. Obvious, common-sense risks, ones that would be apparent to a reasonable patient without special guidance, are one example. Doctors aren’t usually required to disclose each and every potential risk, either; extremely-rare side effects, for example, can usually be left out. The same goes for risks that a competent doctor would not have been able to foresee.

When Is A Patient’s Sign-Off Required?

State laws define two broad forms of consent:

  • implied consent
  • express, or written, consent

While the purpose of every exam or procedure should be explained beforehand, a patient’s consent can, in some cases, be implied by their actions. A patient who rolls up her sleeve for a blood pressure cuff, for example, is usually taken to have consented to the exam, whether or not she signs a form. Implied consent is generally accepted for routine and basic examinations, including annual physical exams with your doctor.

Signing A Consent Document

Invasive procedures are another story. When an exam or procedure carries significant risks, or there are suitable alternatives to consider, state laws require express consent. Patients have to formally consent to serious procedures beforehand, usually by signing a consent document and accepting the potential risks and rewards of a chosen treatment.

Note, however, that signing a consent form isn’t the same as actually giving your informed consent. Signed consent documents simply show that you believed you had been fully-informed. As a patient, it’s not your duty to know, before the fact, which medical details will be crucial to your treatment decisions. Those details are selected and communicated by a medical professional.

Which Procedures Are Covered By Pennsylvania Law?

The legal principles behind informed consent have been recognized in Pennsylvania’s common law tradition since at least 1932, according to Physicians News Digest. That year, the State’s Superior Court affirmed that patients have the right to consult with their physicians about treatment options. Patient consent, the Court wrote, is an essential precondition of medical treatment. Thirty-one years later, in 1963, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court formally adopted this rule, shaping the way state courts would view informed consent for decades.

Until fairly recently, however, Pennsylvania state law only required informed consent before surgical procedures. The Health Care Services Malpractice Act, a law passed in 1997, changed that, expanding the number of situations in which express consent is mandatory. Today, express informed consent is required before the following treatments are performed:

  • surgical procedures
  • the administration of anesthesia during surgery
  • chemotherapy and radiation therapy
  • blood transfusions
  • implantation of surgical devices or appliances
  • experimental medications and medical devices
  • use of an approved medication for an experimental purpose

At the moment, Pennsylvania law does not require informed consent prior to the administration of antibiotics, non-experimental medications or orally-administered prescription drugs. Most treatments performed by chiropractors, including chiropractic manipulations, are not covered by the State’s informed consent laws.

Who Must Secure Consent?

In Pennsylvania, physicians must take personal responsibility for acquiring informed consent from their patients. According to a 2017 opinion of the State’s Supreme Court, doctors, and only doctors, have a legal obligation to secure informed consent. In the Court’s decision for Shinal v. Thomas, a case involving a botched brain surgery, Pennsylvania Supreme Court Justice David Wecht wrote,

“Without direct dialogue and a two-way exchange between the physician and patient, the physician cannot be confident that the patient comprehends the risks, benefits, likelihood of success and alternatives. Only by personally satisfying the duty of disclosure, may the physician ensure that consent truly is informed.”

This duty, Law360 reports, cannot be delegated to subordinates, including resident physicians or nurses. Thus, only physicians can be held accountable for failing to secure a patient’s informed consent.

No “Vicarious Liability,” PA Supreme Court Rules

This distinction alone places informed consent violations at odds with most medical malpractice cases. In many malpractice claims, hospitals can be held at least partially liable for an employee’s mistakes, via a legal doctrine known as “vicarious liability.” However, Pennsylvania state court precedent holds that vicarious liability does not apply in cases related to informed consent.

Major Exceptions

State laws generally recognize two major exceptions to the concept of informed consent:

  • emergency medical care
  • diminished patient autonomy

When immediate medical care is required to prevent severe or irreparable patient harm, informed consent isn’t usually required. Delays in emergency care can have permanent consequences; as a result, most states provide doctors with legal wiggle room when the process of securing informed consent would prevent a life-saving treatment from being administered in time.

That doesn’t mean that informed consent disappears in the emergency room. The general standard applied in emergency medical treatment is that informed consent should be obtained for conscious patients who are not prevented from making logical decisions by an emergent medical condition. In emergency circumstances, however, informed consent may not be required.

Minors & Legally Incompetent Adults

State laws recognize that the rights of patients with “diminished autonomy,” like children and adults with cognitive disabilities, should be protected. Some people, due to their age or mental capacity, are considered unable to consent or refuse medical treatment. In these cases, the right to provide informed consent is transferred to parents or legal guardians. Informed consent is still required, but it might not come from the patient. However, there are major exceptions to this general rule. Pennsylvania law allows some minors (usually children over the age of 14) to consent, without the intervention of parents or legal guardians, to specific forms of medical treatment. To learn more about these exceptions, visit our Informed Consent FAQ.

The Structure Of An Informed Consent Lawsuit

What happens when a doctor performs a diagnostic test or medical procedure without securing informed consent? In some cases, patients who ultimately suffer side effects or complications that were not properly disclosed will be able to file a civil lawsuit against their physician. This is not, however, a claim for medical malpractice. In Pennsylvania, failing to acquire informed consent is considered a form of battery:

  • Battery – the intentional touching of someone else in an offensive or injury-causing manner

Negligence doesn’t come into the equation. It does not matter, in the context of an informed consent claim, whether or not the doctor made a careless mistake in administering medical care. The crucial point is simply that the doctor administered medical care to which the patient did not provide their informed consent.

Also irrelevant is whether or not a reasonable patient, having been properly informed of a procedure’s risks and alternative options, would have consented to the treatment. In Pennsylvania, patients have an absolute right to “medical self-determination,” including a right to make unreasonable choices about their care.

As a result, patients have no obligation to prove that they would have made a different choice based on more accurate information. The standard is minimal; patients need only demonstrate that the medical information not provided to them would have been a “substantial” (or “material”) factor in their decision-making process.

Strict Time Limits Apply

Pennsylvania has a variety of laws, collectively known as the “statutes of limitations,” that restrict the amount of time injured people have to file civil lawsuits. In most cases, claims against medical professionals, including professionals, must be filed within two years.

The time period begins, however, according to a “discovery rule,” which holds that injured patients should be given adequate time to discover the connection between their injuries and a medical error or procedure. In other words, most patients who plan to file suit will have two years from the day they learn (or should have learned) that a doctor’s actions may have caused their injuries. Another law, the “statute of repose,” serves as a hard deadline. No lawsuit can be filed against a medical professional in Pennsylvania more than seven years after harmful conduct took place.

Wrongful death lawsuits are a notable exception. When a decedent’s estate chooses to file suit, the estate has two years beginning on the date of death.

Different Deadlines For Minor Victims

Another exception to this general two-year time frame is usually applied when the person who suffered an injury is a minor – under the age of 18. Children are normally given two years, beginning on the day they turn 18, to file a civil lawsuit. The statute of repose is also different for child victims. Minors lose their right to file suit either seven years after the alleged wrongdoing or upon their 20th birthday, whichever date is later.

Doctor Filling SyringePhysician Completing Medical RecordsHospital Emergency Room
The Disability Guys Pennsylvania

MEET OUR MANAGING PARTNER: BRIAN MITTMAN

“I have been working since I was 14. I have probably held at least two dozen different jobs and I’ve seen people injured and hurt. One of the reasons I got involved with disability law is that I have a very good family friend who has been disabled his entire life, and I’ve seen how he’s struggled in order to keep working and try to work. When I was presented with the opportunity to get involved with what’s called “disability law,” I was really thrilled to be able to not only practice being an attorney, but helping other people who really need to know things about what their choices are, what they can do, and what their future may hold.

I am originally from Maple Glen, PA and is a life-long Eagles fan.

I have focused on helping individuals with their workers’ compensation, social security disability and long-term disability claims, as well as obtaining financial security for individuals who have had accidents.

As part of helping workers’ and their families, I have also been active in teaching continuing legal education courses to other attorneys, provide free seminars and webinars to the public on how to protect their rights, and I am active in various organizations such as the National Organization of Social Security Claims Representatives, the Injured Workers’ Bar Association and the Workers’ Injury Law & Advocacy Group.”

Brian Mittman, Esq.

 
The Disability Guys Pennsylvania

THE DISABILITY GUYS ACTION PLAN.

The Disability Guys PA Action Plan
Draft Your Claim
DRAFT YOUR CLAIM
If you haven’t filed a case, 
we will help you fill out the form you need in the right way.
TDG ACTION PLAN™
TDG ACTION PLAN
The TDG action plan helps you map out the legal strategy to receive the benefits
you deserve.
GET BACK YOUR LIFE
GET YOUR LIFE BACK
Have a peace of mind
and return to the life
you’ve missed.
The Disability Guys Pennsylvania

OUR LATEST POSTS.

July 5, 2017
Weekly Accident Report: July 5th, 2017

Here is this week's look at some of the most serious accidents from around the Philadelphia, Delaware County, and Montgomery County region. Wrong-way Truck Crashes Into Philadelphia Bar A U-Haul truck was driving the wrong way on a one-way street when it hopped over a curb and plowed into a newly opened bar/restaurant in the […]

Read More
July 12, 2017
Weekly Accident Roundup - July 12th, 2017

Our weekly accident report for July 12th, 2017 looks at a fatal maritime work accident, two car accidents each involving just one driver, and a heroic rescue by a SEPTA police officer. Packer Marine Terminal Employer Killed In Work Accident A 52-year old employee at Packer Avenue Marine Terminal in South Philadelphia was killed in […]

Read More
July 19, 2017
Weekly Accident Report For 7/19/2017

This week's accident roundup features: An accident involving two SEPTA vehicles in Philly A teenage boy loses his leg after being struck by a train An intoxicated Delaware County couple recklessly crashes into 3 parked cars If you've recently been injured in an accident caused by someone else, a personal injury lawsuit could help you […]

Read More
The Disability Guys Pennsylvania

OUR RECORD SPEAKS FOR ITSELF.

85 +
YEARS OF EXPERIENCE
1
OFFICE LOCATION
100,000 + 
PEOPLE REPRESENTED
The Disability Guys Pennsylvania

WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING.

They kept my best interests at heart. Updates on a regular basis of the status of the case and returning of calls was much more prompt after I started dealing with the same lawyers and support team.

Danielle Dexter,

Workers Comp Client from Westchester County

 
 

I’m very satisfied with my law firm. I will always recommend Markhoff & Mittman firm to family and friends. It’s very important to have professional and supportive Law firm during your case.

Sevdija Lalicic

Workers Compensation Client

The Disability Guys Pennsylvania

Our Office Location.

The Disability Guys Pennsylvania

Personal Injury Attorneys

145 Greenwood Ave Suite 400, Wyncote, PA 19095

Hours Of Operation

Monday - Open 24 hours
Tuesday - Open 24 hours
Wednesday - Open 24 hours
Thursday - Open 24 hours
Friday - Open 24 hours
Saturday - Open 24 hours
Sunday - Open 24 hours

Website: https://pa.thedisabilityguys.com/personal-injury/montgomery-county/

Phone: (215) 866-2018

Plus Code: 3VR5+QQ Wyncote, Pennsylvania

Follow Us On Socials

Tiktok
Facebook
YouTube
X (Twitter)

[seopress_breadcrumbs]
© 2025 The Disability Guys Pennsylvania | The Disability Guys, All Rights Reserved. Attorney Advertising
SitemapDisclaimers & Terms Of ServicePrivacy Policy