Literature DB >> 20711633

Conditional preferences and refusal of treatment.

William Glod1.   

Abstract

In this essay, I will use a minimalist standard of decision-making capacity (DMC) to ascertain two cases in the medical ethics literature: the 1978 case of Mary C. Northern and a more recent case involving a paranoid war veteran (call him Jack). In both cases the patients refuse medical treatment out of denial that they are genuinely ill. I believe these cases illustrate two matters: (1) the need of holding oneself to a minimal DMC standard so as to make as salient as possible the patient's own reasons for sometimes unusual treatment denials; (2) the need for clinicians and other relevant parties to exercise great sensitivity toward engaging, on the patient's own terms, idiosyncratic treatment refusals through regard for what I will call the patient's "conditional preferences." These are particularly relevant matters when a patient's DMC is questionable yet he/she registers what may well be his/her settled preferences.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20711633     DOI: 10.1007/s10730-010-9133-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  HEC Forum        ISSN: 0956-2737


  1 in total

Review 1.  When psychiatry and bioethics disagree about patient decision making capacity (DMC).

Authors:  P L Schneider; K A Bramstedt
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2006-02       Impact factor: 2.903

  1 in total

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