Material Risk Disclosure Standards .
I. Meaning of “Material Risk”
A material risk is a risk that:
A reasonable patient in the same position would consider important when deciding whether to undergo a procedure.
Courts consistently hold that materiality is not based only on medical opinion but on patient-centred decision-making.
Key Legal Idea:
Doctors must disclose not only:
- common risks
but also: - serious rare risks
- risks affecting quality of life
- risks that would influence the patient’s choice
II. Core Legal Standards for Disclosure
Across jurisdictions, courts have developed 3 main disclosure standards:
1. Reasonable Doctor Standard (older approach)
- What a responsible doctor would disclose
- Focus: medical custom
2. Reasonable Patient Standard (modern approach)
- What a reasonable patient would want to know
- Focus: patient autonomy
3. Material Risk Standard (dominant today)
- What this specific patient would consider important
III. Leading Case Laws on Material Risk Disclosure
1. Rogers v Whitaker (Australia, 1992)
Facts:
- Patient had surgery on her eye
- Rare risk of blindness in the other eye was not disclosed
- The risk was very rare but catastrophic
Issue:
Should the doctor disclose extremely rare but serious risks?
Decision:
The High Court held:
- Doctor must disclose material risks, even if rare
- Professional practice alone is not enough to decide disclosure
Legal Principle:
👉 A risk is material if:
- it would influence a reasonable patient’s decision
- OR it is significant to this particular patient
Importance:
This case is the foundation of modern informed consent law worldwide.
2. Chester v Afshar (UK House of Lords, 2004)
Facts:
- Patient underwent spinal surgery
- Small but serious risk of paralysis was not disclosed
- The risk materialised after surgery
Issue:
Is failure to disclose material risk actionable even if surgery was properly performed?
Decision:
Court held:
- Failure to disclose material risk = breach of duty
- Even if risk is small, patient must be warned
Legal Principle:
👉 Patient autonomy is central; disclosure is mandatory for material risks regardless of probability.
Importance:
This case strongly reinforces ethical autonomy over medical paternalism.
3. Montgomery v Lanarkshire Health Board (UK Supreme Court, 2015)
Facts:
- Diabetic mother not informed of risk of shoulder dystocia during childbirth
- Child suffered severe injury
Issue:
Should doctors decide what risks to disclose?
Decision:
Court rejected old medical paternalism rule.
Held:
- Doctors must disclose risks a reasonable patient would find significant
- Also must disclose alternative treatments
Legal Principle:
👉 Material risk includes:
- serious possible outcomes
- alternatives to treatment
- risks affecting lifestyle or bodily integrity
Importance:
This is now the leading UK authority on informed consent.
4. Sidaway v Board of Governors (UK, 1985)
Facts:
- Patient underwent spinal surgery
- Rare neurological complications not disclosed
- Patient suffered harm
Issue:
Whether non-disclosure of rare risk is negligence.
Decision:
Court was divided:
- Majority supported medical discretion
- Minority supported patient-centred disclosure
Legal Principle:
Although later modified, it introduced:
👉 concept that disclosure depends on risk materiality, not just probability
Importance:
This case marks the transition period toward modern standards.
5. Castell v De Greef (South Africa, 1994)
Facts:
- Cosmetic surgery performed
- Complications occurred
- Patient claimed insufficient risk disclosure
Issue:
What is the correct test for informed consent?
Decision:
Court held:
- Only material risks must be disclosed
- Standard is objective reasonable patient test
Legal Principle:
👉 Material risk = risk that a reasonable patient would attach significance to
Importance:
This case is highly influential in cosmetic surgery law globally, especially because it directly deals with elective procedures.
6. White v Turner (Canada, 1981)
Facts:
- Patient underwent elective breast surgery
- Developed complications
- Claimed insufficient warning of risks
Issue:
Whether unusual risks must be disclosed in elective surgery.
Decision:
Court held:
- Even minimal or rare risks must be disclosed in cosmetic surgery
- Because surgery is non-essential
Legal Principle:
👉 In elective cosmetic surgery:
- disclosure threshold is higher
- even “small risks” become material
Importance:
This case is central in cosmetic surgery law because it recognizes:
“The more elective the procedure, the greater the disclosure duty.”
7. Tiglao v Sleightholm (Canada, 2012)
Facts:
- Patient underwent cosmetic procedures (breast augmentation + tummy tuck)
- Language barrier and communication issues
- Risks were not properly understood
Issue:
Whether consent was truly informed.
Decision:
Court found:
- doctor failed to ensure patient understood material risks and consequences
- consent was invalid despite signed forms
Legal Principle:
👉 Disclosure is not just giving information, but ensuring understanding
Importance:
Introduces concept of:
- communication quality
- patient comprehension
- vulnerability factors (language, education)
IV. Key Principles Derived from All Cases
1. Patient-Centred Materiality Test
A risk is material if:
- it would affect a reasonable patient’s decision
- OR it is significant to this patient’s personal situation
2. Elective Cosmetic Surgery = Higher Disclosure Duty
From White v Turner + Montgomery:
- more elective = more disclosure required
- even low probability risks become material
3. Risk Probability Is Not the Only Factor
Even if a risk is:
- rare → still must be disclosed if serious
Example:
- blindness
- paralysis
- disfigurement
4. Consent Must Be Meaningful, Not Formal
From Tiglao v Sleightholm:
- signed consent form is not enough
- doctor must ensure understanding
5. Alternatives Must Be Disclosed
From Montgomery:
Doctors must disclose:
- alternative treatments
- non-surgical options
- doing nothing
6. Emotional and Psychological Impact Matters
Courts increasingly recognize:
- body image impact
- mental distress from complications
- long-term quality-of-life changes
V. Final Legal Conclusion
Material risk disclosure standards require doctors to:
Disclose any risk that a reasonable patient would consider significant in deciding whether to undergo the procedure, especially in cosmetic surgery where the treatment is elective and not medically necessary.
Courts consistently emphasise:
- patient autonomy over medical discretion
- full transparency over professional judgment
- meaningful understanding over formal consent

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