Literature DB >> 17333491

Autonomy and informed consent: a mistaken association?

Sigurdur Kristinsson1.   

Abstract

For decades, the greater part of efforts to improve regulatory frameworks for research ethics has focused on informed consent procedures; their design, codification and regulation. Why is informed consent thought to be so important? Since the publication of the Belmont Report in 1979, the standard response has been that obtaining informed consent is a way of treating individuals as autonomous agents. Despite its political success, the philosophical validity of this Belmont view cannot be taken for granted. If the Belmont view is to be based on a conception of autonomy that generates moral justification, it will either have to be reinterpreted along Kantian lines or coupled with a something like Mill's conception of individuality. The Kantian interpretation would be a radical reinterpretation of the Belmont view, while the Millian justification is incompatible with the liberal requirement that justification for public policy should be neutral between controversial conceptions of the good. This consequence might be avoided by replacing Mill's conception of individuality with a procedural conception of autonomy, but I argue that the resulting view would in fact fail to support a non-Kantian, autonomy-based justification of informed consent. These difficulties suggest that insofar as informed consent is justified by respect for persons and considerations of autonomy, as the Belmont report maintained, the justification should be along the lines of Kantian autonomy and not individual autonomy.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17333491     DOI: 10.1007/s11019-007-9048-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Health Care Philos        ISSN: 1386-7423


  3 in total

1.  Has the emphasis on autonomy gone too far? Insights from Dostoevsky on parental decisionmaking in the NICU.

Authors:  John J Paris; Neil Graham; Michael D Schreiber; Michele Goodwin
Journal:  Camb Q Healthc Ethics       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 1.284

2.  Some limits of informed consent.

Authors:  O O'Neill
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2003-02       Impact factor: 2.903

3.  The Belmont Report. Ethical principles and guidelines for the protection of human subjects of research.

Authors: 
Journal:  J Am Coll Dent       Date:  2014
  3 in total
  3 in total

1.  Palliative sedation until death: an approach from Kant's ethics of virtue.

Authors:  Jeroen G J Hasselaar
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2009-01-09

2.  Biobank research and the right to privacy.

Authors:  Lars Oystein Ursin
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2008-10-15

3.  Patients' perceived purpose of clinical informed consent: Mill's individual autonomy model is preferred.

Authors:  Muhammad M Hammami; Eman A Al-Gaai; Yussuf Al-Jawarneh; Hala Amer; Muhammad B Hammami; Abdullah Eissa; Mohammad Al Qadire
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2014-01-10       Impact factor: 2.652

  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.