Healthcare decision making in Queensland
There are laws and guidelines in Queensland for making decisions about health, whether in an emergency situation, or regarding an ongoing health issue.
It’s everyone’s right to have the opportunity to consent to or refuse treatments and the person must remain at the centre of health decisions.
How we can help
ADA Law can advise patients and their practitioners about health care decision making including:
- Steps for obtaining consent or refusal
- Relevant legislation and where it applies
- Human rights and the importance of supported decision making
- Guidance on the Queensland Capacity Assessment Guidelines and supported decision making strategies
- Support for patients to express their views and wishes, including negotiation with their attorneys when there are concerns or disagreements around health matters
- When to defer to substitute decision makers and their hierarchy
- Patient representation at QCAT hearings.
Key principles for health practitioners
- Always assume an adult has capacity to make decisions for themselves.
- Capacity fluctuates and is decision-specific and time-specific.
- Provide the adult with the support and information they need to make and communicate decisions. Deferring to a substitute decision maker is the last resort.
- Assess the adult’s decision-making ability rather than whether the decision they make is ‘good’ or ‘bad’.
- Respect the adult’s dignity and privacy by being transparent about when assessing their decision-making capacity and why.
Resource links
Who decides about receiving or refusing healthcare
Healthcare decision making in Queensland process chart
Healthcare decision making: Key
principles for health practitioners
Case scenarios process and analysis
Abraham, a young man who has been brought to Emergency following a motor vehicle accident. Download Process & Analysis
Abraham’s scenario process
Elizabeth is a 64 year old retiree who is refusing further dialysis treatment.
Download Process & Analysis
Elizabeth’s scenario process
Maria has had a fall and is in Emergency very confused and is on her own.
Download Process & Analysis
Maria’s scenario process
Other resources
General principles for supporting a
person with impaired capacity
Overview of the Human Rights Act (Qld) 2019
Queensland capacity assessment guidelines: A guide to understanding capacity, capacity assessment
Power of Attorney Act 1998
Guardianship and Administration Act
2000
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