Cross References
Mental illness, informed consent for nonemergency treatment, see §334E-1.
Law Journals and Reviews
Keomaka v. Zakaib: The Physician's Affirmative Duty to Protect Patient Autonomy Through the Process of Informed Consent. 14 UH L. Rev. 801.
Case Notes
Informed consent doctrine discussed. 8 H. App. 518, 811 P.2d 478.
Patient-oriented standard applies to physician's duty to disclose risk information prior to treatment. 79 H. 475, 904 P.2d 489.
Under circumstances of case, physician did not have affirmative duty to inform patient that physician was not plastic surgeon and did not have hospital privileges. 86 H. 84, 947 P.2d 952.
A consent form is no substitute for a physician's affirmative duty to inform his or her patient. 86 H. 93 (App.), 947 P.2d 961.
Prior law.
Malpractice plaintiff required to prove harm complained of was probable risk of surgery and that hospital knew or should have known of risk. 6 H. App. 563, 732 P.2d 1255.