The notion of informed consent relates, in the vast majority of cases, to a cause of action in negligence rather than battery but may be said to have evolved from the notion of battery. A battery occurs when there is “an unprivileged, unconsented to and intentional invasion of [a person’s] bodily integrity”: Reibl v. Hughes (1980), 1980 CanLII 23 (SCC), 114 D.L.R. (3d) 1 at 10 (S.C.C.). With respect to medical treatment, a battery occurs when there is either no consent to treatment at all, or that consent is obtained via fraud or misrepresentation. On the other hand, a failure to disclose the attendant risks of a procedure relates to an informed choice of submitting to or refusing recommended and appropriate treatment … [and] arises as a breach of an anterior duty of due care, comparable in legal obligation to the duty of due care in carrying out the particular treatment to which the patient has consented: Reibl v. Hughes, supra at 11.
"The most advanced legal research software ever built."
The above passage should not be considered legal advice. Reliable answers to complex legal questions require comprehensive research memos. To learn more visit www.alexi.com.