Literature DB >> 23807736

Evaluating medico-legal decisional competency criteria.

Demian Whiting1.   

Abstract

In this paper I get clearer on the considerations that ought to inform the evaluation and development of medico-legal competency criteria-where this is taken to be a question regarding the abilities that ought to be needed for a patient to be found competent in medico-legal contexts. In the "Decisional Competency in Medico-Legal Contexts" section I explore how the question regarding the abilities that ought to be needed for decisional competence is to be interpreted. I begin by considering an interpretation that takes the question to be asking about the abilities needed to satisfy an idealized view of competent decision-making, according to which decisional competency is a matter of possessing those abilities or attributes that are needed to engage in good or effective or, perhaps, substantially autonomous or rational decision-making. The view has some plausibility-it accords with the way decisional competency is understood in a number of everyday contexts-but fails as an interpretation of the question regarding the abilities that should be needed for decisional competence in medico-legal contexts. Nevertheless, consideration of why it is mistaken suggests a more accurate interpretation and points the way in which the question regarding the evaluation of medico-legal competency criteria is to be answered. Building on other scholarly work in the area, I outline in the "Primary and Secondary Requirements" section several requirements that decisional competence criteria ought to satisfy. Then, in the "Applying the Framework" section, I say something about the extent to which medico-legal competency criteria, as well as some models of decisional competency proposed in the academic literature, fulfil those requirements.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 23807736     DOI: 10.1007/s10728-013-0258-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Care Anal        ISSN: 1065-3058


  19 in total

1.  Re T (Adult: Refusal of Medical Treatment)

Authors: 
Journal:  All Engl Law Rep       Date:  1992-07-30

2.  Patient decision-making capacity and risk.

Authors:  Mark R Wicclair
Journal:  Bioethics       Date:  1991-04       Impact factor: 1.898

3.  Public health ethics: mapping the terrain.

Authors:  James F Childress; Ruth R Faden; Ruth D Gaare; Lawrence O Gostin; Jeffrey Kahn; Richard J Bonnie; Nancy E Kass; Anna C Mastroianni; Jonathan D Moreno; Phillip Nieburg
Journal:  J Law Med Ethics       Date:  2002       Impact factor: 1.718

4.  Competency to give an informed consent. A model for making clinical assessments.

Authors:  J F Drane
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1984-08-17       Impact factor: 56.272

5.  Competence, marginal and otherwise: concepts and ethics.

Authors:  B Freedman
Journal:  Int J Law Psychiatry       Date:  1981

6.  AUTONOMY, LIBERTY, AND MEDICAL DECISION-MAKING.

Authors:  John Coggon; José Miola
Journal:  Camb Law J       Date:  2011-11

Review 7.  Criteria for patient decision making (in)competence: a review of and commentary on some empirical approaches.

Authors:  S P Welie
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2001

8.  Competence, practical rationality and what a patient values.

Authors:  Jillian Craigie
Journal:  Bioethics       Date:  2009-12-30       Impact factor: 1.898

Review 9.  Mental capacity, legal competence and consent to treatment.

Authors:  Alec Buchanan
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  2004-09       Impact factor: 18.000

10.  Competence to make treatment decisions in anorexia nervosa: thinking processes and values.

Authors:  Dr Jacinta O A Tan; Professor Tony Hope; Dr Anne Stewart; Professor Raymond Fitzpatrick
Journal:  Philos Psychiatr Psychol       Date:  2006-12
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