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Compliance · Template

Informed-Consent Framework (Elements Overview)

The elements an informed-consent document generally addresses — a framework to take to your attorney, NOT a usable consent form.

Framework only — NOT a usable consent form. This is a FRAMEWORK showing the elements an informed-consent document generally addresses — it is NOT a ready-to-use consent form and must not be used as your consent document. Have your own attorney and medical director draft and review the actual consent forms your practice uses.
An original Money Racket template

This is an educational overview of what informed consent generally covers, so you can have an informed conversation with your attorney and medical director. It is NOT a consent form and must not be used as one — your actual, procedure-specific forms must be drafted and reviewed by your own counsel and clinicians.

Procedure-specific, not generic

Effective informed consent is specific to the actual procedure and product, not a one-size generic template signed for everything. The elements below describe what such a document generally addresses — your attorney builds the real, procedure-specific versions.

What it generally addresses

The nature of the specific procedure and what it involves; the realistic expected outcomes and that results vary; the material risks, possible complications, and adverse events; reasonable alternatives (including no treatment); aftercare and follow-up expectations; and the patient’s opportunity to ask questions and to decline. The specifics, scope, and language are for your counsel and clinicians to determine.

Why generic templates are a liability

A defective or generic consent form you provided and a patient relied on is itself a liability vector. Consent that doesn’t match the actual procedure, omits material risks, or reads as boilerplate can fail exactly when it matters. That’s why this is a framework to discuss — not a document to deploy.

The honest next step

Take this elements overview to your healthcare attorney and medical director and have them draft and review the actual, procedure-specific consent forms your practice uses. Treat anything you find online (including this) as orientation, never as your consent document.

Framework only — NOT a usable consent form. This is a FRAMEWORK showing the elements an informed-consent document generally addresses — it is NOT a ready-to-use consent form and must not be used as your consent document. Have your own attorney and medical director draft and review the actual consent forms your practice uses. © 2026 Money Racket.
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