Ethical and Legal Considerations in Palliative Dentistry
Expert-defined terms from the Advanced Certificate in Palliative Oral Health course at LearnUNI. Free to read, free to share, paired with a professional course.
Advance Directive – Related terms #
living will, healthcare proxy. A written statement that specifies a patient’s preferences for dental and medical treatment when they can no longer communicate. Example: a patient with terminal cancer outlines desire for pain‑relief‑only oral care. Challenge: ensuring the directive is up‑to‑date and accessible to the dental team.
Advance Care Planning – Related terms #
advance directive, shared decision‑making. A continuous process of discussing future health‑care wishes, including oral health, with patients, families, and clinicians. Practical application: scheduling a planning visit early in the disease trajectory. Challenge: navigating cultural differences in discussing death.
American Dental Association (ADA) Code of Ethics – Related terms #
professional standards, ethical guidelines. The official set of principles governing dentists’ conduct, emphasizing patient autonomy, beneficence, non‑maleficence, and justice. Example: using the Code to justify withholding aggressive dental procedures that cause undue suffering. Challenge: interpreting broad principles in complex palliative scenarios.
Beneficence – Related terms #
non‑maleficence, patient‑centered care. The ethical duty to act in the patient’s best interest, promoting comfort and quality of life. Practical application: selecting a soft‑diet diet to reduce oral trauma. Challenge: balancing beneficence with patient autonomy when wishes conflict.
Bioethics Committee – Related terms #
ethics consultation, institutional review board. A multidisciplinary group that reviews difficult ethical cases, providing recommendations for dental care in palliative settings. Example: consulting the committee when a patient refuses life‑sustaining oral hygiene. Challenge: obtaining timely input during urgent care needs.
Boundaries of Care – Related terms #
scope of practice, interdisciplinary collaboration. The limits within which a palliative dentist provides services, recognizing when to refer to specialists or hospice teams. Practical application: referring a patient with uncontrolled oral infection to a maxillofacial surgeon. Challenge: avoiding over‑extension while maintaining continuity.
Capacity Assessment – Related terms #
competence evaluation, informed consent. The process of determining a patient’s mental ability to understand treatment options and make decisions. Example: using a Mini‑Mental State Examination before planning a prosthetic. Challenge: fluctuating capacity in progressive neurological disease.
Clinical Documentation – Related terms #
medical record, legal evidence. Accurate, contemporaneous recording of assessments, decisions, consent, and care provided. Practical application: noting patient’s expressed wish to avoid invasive procedures. Challenge: ensuring documentation meets both clinical and legal standards without breaching confidentiality.
Confidentiality – Related terms #
HIPAA, privacy. The ethical and legal obligation to protect patient information from unauthorized disclosure. Example: sharing oral health status with a hospice nurse only after patient consent. Challenge: balancing information sharing for coordinated care with privacy protections.
Consent, Informed – Related terms #
capacity assessment, advance directive. A process where the patient receives adequate information, understands risks and benefits, and voluntarily agrees to treatment. Practical application: explaining the limited benefit of a dental extraction in a frail patient. Challenge: obtaining valid consent when language barriers exist.
Conscientious Objection – Related terms #
ethical dilemma, patient rights. A practitioner’s refusal to provide a service that conflicts with personal moral or religious beliefs. Example: a dentist declines to place a feeding tube‑related prosthesis. Challenge: ensuring the patient’s access to care despite the objection.
Continuity of Care – Related terms #
care coordination, interdisciplinary team. Maintaining consistent dental management across settings (hospital, home, hospice). Practical application: transferring oral health records to a community nurse. Challenge: gaps in communication leading to duplicated or missed interventions.
Culture‑Sensitive Care – Related terms #
cultural competence, patient values. Recognizing and respecting cultural beliefs that influence oral health decisions. Example: accommodating a family’s preference for natural remedies alongside palliative dental care. Challenge: integrating cultural practices without compromising safety.
Dental Ethics Committee – Related terms #
bioethics committee, professional standards. A specialized group within a dental institution that reviews ethical issues specific to oral health. Practical application: seeking guidance on withholding a denture adjustment that may cause pain. Challenge: limited availability in smaller practices.
Dental Home – Related terms #
patient‑centered medical home, care coordination. A continuous, comprehensive oral health care model that supports patients throughout disease progression. Example: establishing a dental home early for a patient with ALS. Challenge: integrating dental home with medical hospice services.
Dolor – Related terms #
pain management, comfort care. The Latin term for pain; a central focus of palliative dentistry is alleviating oral discomfort. Practical application: prescribing topical anesthetic for mucosal ulceration. Challenge: differentiating pain from anxiety‑related discomfort.
Duty of Care – Related terms #
legal responsibility, standard of practice. The legal obligation to provide competent, appropriate dental services. Example: ensuring proper infection control during home visits. Challenge: defining duty when patient’s prognosis is uncertain.
End‑of‑Life Care – Related terms #
hospice, palliative dentistry. The period when a patient’s disease is incurable and focus shifts to comfort. Practical application: limiting prophylactic procedures that have no immediate benefit. Challenge: predicting when to transition from curative to comfort‑oriented care.
Euthanasia – Related terms #
physician‑assisted suicide, legal statutes. The intentional ending of life to relieve suffering; legality varies by jurisdiction. Example: understanding local law to avoid involvement in illegal acts. Challenge: navigating personal ethical stance while respecting patient autonomy.
Family‑Centred Decision‑Making – Related terms #
shared decision‑making, proxy consent. Involving family members in treatment choices, especially when patient capacity is impaired. Practical application: discussing denture removal with relatives. Challenge: managing family conflict when preferences differ.
Fiduciary Responsibility – Related terms #
trust relationship, ethical duty. The legal and ethical obligation to act in the patient’s best interest, placing their welfare above personal gain. Example: refusing financial incentives for unnecessary procedures. Challenge: recognizing subtle pressures that may breach fiduciary duty.
Fluoridation Policy – Related terms #
preventive care, risk‑benefit analysis. Guidelines governing fluoride use in palliative patients, balancing caries prevention against potential mucosal irritation. Practical application: prescribing low‑dose fluoride rinses for a patient with xerostomia. Challenge: limited evidence for optimal dosing in frail populations.
Geriatric Oral Health Assessment Tool (GOHAT) – Related terms #
screening instrument, risk assessment. A validated checklist for evaluating oral health needs in older adults. Example: using GOHAT to prioritize care for a hospice patient. Challenge: adapting the tool for patients with severe cognitive decline.
Health Care Proxy – Related terms #
legal surrogate, advance directive. A person legally authorized to make health‑care decisions when the patient is incapacitated. Practical application: obtaining proxy consent for a dental extraction. Challenge: confirming proxy’s authority across state lines.
Informed Refusal – Related terms #
patient autonomy, documentation. When a competent patient declines recommended treatment after understanding consequences. Example: a patient declines a mandibular denture despite risk of aspiration. Challenge: documenting refusal to protect against legal claims.
Institutional Review Board (IRB) – Related terms #
research ethics, human subjects protection. A committee that reviews research protocols involving human participants, including palliative dentistry studies. Practical application: submitting a study on oral pain scales for hospice patients. Challenge: ensuring minimal burden on vulnerable participants.
Interdisciplinary Collaboration – Related terms #
team‑based care, care coordination. Working jointly with physicians, nurses, social workers, and pharmacists to address comprehensive needs. Example: coordinating with a speech therapist for a patient with dysphagia. Challenge: aligning schedules and communication platforms.
International Classification of Diseases (ICD‑10) Coding – Related terms #
billing, clinical documentation. Standardized codes for diagnoses, including oral conditions, used for reimbursement and data collection. Practical application: coding “oral mucositis” for a palliative patient. Challenge: ensuring accurate coding to avoid claim denials.
Legal Liability – Related terms #
negligence, malpractice. The potential for civil or criminal penalties when a dentist fails to meet the standard of care. Example: a patient suffers a fracture from an improperly placed denture. Challenge: maintaining adequate malpractice insurance in high‑risk settings.
Malpractice Insurance – Related terms #
professional indemnity, risk management. Coverage that protects dentists against claims of negligence. Practical application: verifying policy includes home‑visit services. Challenge: higher premiums for practitioners in palliative care due to perceived risk.
Medical‑Dental Integration – Related terms #
interdisciplinary collaboration, holistic care. The coordinated approach that aligns oral health with overall medical management. Example: integrating oral pain assessment into a patient’s daily hospice chart. Challenge: overcoming siloed health‑record systems.
Medication‑Induced Xerostomia – Related terms #
dry mouth, saliva substitutes. Reduced salivary flow caused by drugs commonly used in palliative care (e.g., opioids, antihistamines). Practical application: recommending sugar‑free lozenges. Challenge: managing severe xerostomia that predisposes to candidiasis.
Non‑Maleficence – Related terms #
beneficence, risk avoidance. The ethical principle of “do no harm,” guiding dentists to avoid interventions that increase suffering. Example: deciding against a complex crown on a terminally ill patient. Challenge: distinguishing unavoidable harm from therapeutic benefit.
Oral Health Quality of Life (OHQoL) – Related terms #
patient‑reported outcomes, assessment tools. A measure of how oral conditions affect daily activities, comfort, and social interaction. Practical application: using OHQoL surveys to track improvement after a denture adjustment. Challenge: adapting instruments for patients with limited communication.
Oral Mucositis Management – Related terms #
pain control, supportive care. Strategies to prevent and treat inflammation of the oral mucosa, a common side effect of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Example: applying benzydamine mouthwash. Challenge: limited evidence for optimal dosing in hospice settings.
Oral Palliative Care – Related terms #
symptom management, comfort‑focused dentistry. The subset of palliative medicine dedicated to alleviating oral symptoms such as pain, infection, and functional impairment. Practical application: providing gentle debridement of necrotic tissue. Challenge: balancing intervention intensity with patient stamina.
Patient Advocacy – Related terms #
autonomy, ethical duty. Acting on behalf of the patient to ensure their wishes are respected and their needs met. Example: speaking up when a hospice policy limits necessary oral hygiene supplies. Challenge: navigating institutional constraints.
Patient‑Centred Care – Related terms #
shared decision‑making, respect for preferences. An approach that places the individual’s values, needs, and desires at the core of planning. Practical application: customizing a denture schedule to match the patient’s energy levels. Challenge: reconciling patient wishes with clinical feasibility.
Patient‑Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) – Related terms #
OHQoL, clinical assessment. Instruments that capture the patient’s perspective on symptoms and treatment impact. Example: using a visual analog scale for oral pain. Challenge: ensuring PROMs are usable for patients with limited speech.
Pharmacologic Pain Management – Related terms #
opioids, adjunctive agents. The use of medications to control oral discomfort, often coordinated with the medical team. Practical application: prescribing low‑dose morphine for severe mucosal pain. Challenge: monitoring for side effects such as constipation that may exacerbate oral issues.
Palliative Dental Ethics – Related terms #
beneficence, non‑maleficence. The moral framework guiding dental decisions in end‑of‑life care, emphasizing comfort, dignity, and respect. Example: choosing a minimally invasive approach for a fractured tooth. Challenge: limited literature specific to dental ethics in hospice.
Palliative Dentistry – Related terms #
oral palliative care, comfort‑focused treatment. The discipline that provides dental services aimed at relieving pain, infection, and functional loss for patients with life‑limiting illness. Practical application: performing a simple extraction to prevent aspiration. Challenge: integrating dental services into existing hospice structures.
Palliative Oral Health Assessment – Related terms #
GOHAT, clinical examination. A focused evaluation that identifies urgent oral problems, functional limitations, and psychosocial concerns. Example: assessing for tongue edema that may impede speech. Challenge: completing thorough assessments within limited visit times.
Patient Capacity – Related terms #
competence evaluation, informed consent. The mental ability to understand information, appreciate consequences, and communicate a choice. Practical application: using a simple decision‑making capacity tool before proceeding with a prosthetic. Challenge: fluctuating capacity in neurodegenerative disease.
Patient Dignity – Related terms #
respect, holistic care. Maintaining the sense of self‑worth and privacy during oral examinations and procedures. Example: covering the patient’s torso while performing a mouth exam. Challenge: ensuring dignity when home environments lack privacy.
Patient Rights – Related terms #
autonomy, informed consent. Legal entitlements that include receiving information, refusing treatment, and accessing care. Practical application: providing written information on oral care options. Challenge: patients may be unaware of these rights in hospice settings.
Patient Safety – Related terms #
infection control, risk management. Ensuring that dental interventions do not cause harm, especially in immunocompromised or frail patients. Example: using sterile instruments for a home‑based extraction. Challenge: limited resources in non‑clinical environments.
Professional Boundaries – Related terms #
ethical conduct, dual relationships. Maintaining appropriate relationships with patients, avoiding over‑familiarity that could impair judgment. Practical application: limiting personal contact to clinical encounters. Challenge: small hospice teams may blur lines between professional and personal roles.
Professional Competence – Related terms #
continuing education, scope of practice. The requirement to possess the knowledge, skills, and attitudes necessary for safe palliative dental care. Example: completing a certificate in palliative oral health. Challenge: staying current with evolving guidelines.
Prognostic Uncertainty – Related terms #
clinical judgment, care planning. The difficulty in predicting disease trajectory, which influences timing of dental interventions. Practical application: opting for temporary solutions when life expectancy is unclear. Challenge: avoiding overtreatment while not neglecting symptomatic needs.
Quality Assurance – Related terms #
clinical audit, performance improvement. Systematic processes to monitor and improve the standard of palliative dental services. Example: reviewing case logs for compliance with consent documentation. Challenge: limited data collection tools in hospice settings.
Radiographic Indications – Related terms #
diagnostic imaging, radiation safety. Determining when radiographs are necessary for palliative patients, balancing diagnostic benefit against radiation exposure. Practical application: using a panoramic radiograph to assess a painful mandibular lesion. Challenge: patient positioning difficulties due to limited mobility.
Remote Consultations – Related terms #
tele‑dentistry, virtual care. Providing dental advice via video or phone, useful for patients unable to travel. Example: guiding a caregiver on oral hygiene techniques. Challenge: ensuring accurate assessment without visual examination.
Risk‑Benefit Analysis – Related terms #
clinical decision‑making, ethical justification. Systematic evaluation of potential harms versus expected benefits of a dental procedure. Practical application: weighing the risk of anesthesia against the pain relief from a simple extraction. Challenge: quantifying benefits in terms of quality of life.
Safeguarding – Related terms #
vulnerability, mandatory reporting. Protecting patients from abuse, neglect, or exploitation, especially when they are dependent. Example: reporting suspected neglect of oral hygiene by a caregiver. Challenge: distinguishing neglect from patient’s own refusal.
Scope of Practice – Related terms #
professional competence, regulatory standards. The defined range of services a dentist is legally permitted to provide. Practical application: confirming that home‑based extractions are allowed in the jurisdiction. Challenge: variations in regulations across states or countries.
Shared Decision‑Making – Related terms #
patient‑centred care, informed consent. Collaborative process where clinicians and patients (or proxies) discuss options and jointly decide on a plan. Example: deliberating between a removable denture and no prosthesis. Challenge: time constraints in urgent palliative contexts.
Standard of Care – Related terms #
legal liability, professional competence. The level of care that a reasonably competent practitioner would provide under similar circumstances. Practical application: following evidence‑based guidelines for managing oral candidiasis. Challenge: limited evidence specific to terminally ill populations.
Statutory Obligations – Related terms #
legal liability, mandatory reporting. Laws that require certain actions, such as reporting communicable diseases or suspected abuse. Example: reporting a case of oral herpes in a hospice patient. Challenge: staying current with evolving statutes.
Stomatitis – Related terms #
oral mucositis, infection control. Inflammation of the oral mucosa, often painful and exacerbated by medication side effects. Practical application: prescribing gentle saline rinses. Challenge: distinguishing stomatitis from fungal infection without laboratory confirmation.
Therapeutic Relationship – Related terms #
trust, patient advocacy. The professional bond built on mutual respect, communication, and shared goals. Example: establishing rapport with a patient who has limited speech. Challenge: maintaining therapeutic alliance when treatment options are limited.
Treatment Refusal – Related terms #
informed refusal, patient autonomy. When a competent patient declines a recommended dental procedure. Practical application: documenting the refusal and offering alternative symptom‑relief measures. Challenge: ensuring the patient fully understands potential consequences.
Tele‑Dentistry – Related terms #
remote consultations, digital health. Use of electronic communication to deliver dental care, education, and monitoring. Example: sending photos of a lesion for remote assessment. Challenge: maintaining confidentiality and data security.
Therapeutic Equipoise – Related terms #
ethical dilemma, clinical uncertainty. The genuine uncertainty within the professional community regarding the best treatment. Practical application: discussing both options when evidence is inconclusive. Challenge: communicating uncertainty without causing patient distress.
Therapeutic Intervention – Related terms #
palliative dentistry, symptom management. Any dental procedure or recommendation aimed at relieving pain, infection, or functional loss. Example: applying a fluoride varnish to protect a vulnerable tooth. Challenge: selecting interventions that align with patient goals.
Treatment Goal Alignment – Related terms #
patient‑centred care, shared decision‑making. Ensuring that the dental plan reflects the patient’s overall health objectives. Practical application: prioritizing comfort over aesthetics for a terminal patient. Challenge: reconciling differing priorities among family members.
Trauma‑Informed Care – Related terms #
patient dignity, psychological safety. An approach that recognizes past or present trauma and seeks to avoid re‑triggering it during dental care. Example: explaining each step before touching the oral tissues. Challenge: identifying trauma histories in patients with limited communication.
Vulnerable Populations – Related terms #
ethical considerations, legal protections. Groups at heightened risk of exploitation, such as the elderly, cognitively impaired, or those with limited social support. Practical application: extra vigilance in obtaining consent from a cognitively impaired patient. Challenge: balancing protection with respect for autonomy.
Wound Healing Impairment – Related terms #
infection risk, nutrition. Delayed or poor healing of oral tissues due to systemic disease, medication, or malnutrition. Example: postponing a surgical extraction until nutritional status improves. Challenge: limited ability to modify systemic factors in hospice.
Wound Management Protocol – Related terms #
infection control, palliative care guidelines. Structured steps for caring for oral wounds, including debridement, dressing, and analgesia. Practical application: using a non‑adhesive dressing for a buccal ulcer. Challenge: obtaining appropriate supplies in a home setting.
Zero‑Tolerance Policy for Abuse – Related terms #
safeguarding, mandatory reporting. Institutional stance that any form of abuse toward patients is unacceptable and will be reported. Example: reporting suspected neglect of oral hygiene. Challenge: ensuring staff are trained to recognize subtle forms of neglect.