Literature DB >> 29290004

A Republican Argument Against Nudging and Informed Consent.

Paul Hamilton1.   

Abstract

I argue that it is impermissible to use nudges as a tool to influence patients in the context of informed consent. The motivation for such nudges is that their use can help reconcile potential conflicts between a physician's duty of beneficence and duty to respect patient autonomy. I argue that their use places physicians in a position of domination over patients. That is, it violates the republican freedom of patients because it grants physicians the power to arbitrarily interfere. I also argue that if one tries to adjust the duty of beneficence to avoid this conclusion, then the republican freedom of patients is still threatened under conditions of clinical equipoise. As ways to avoid the inevitability of nudging, I suggest the alternative of boosting or the pairing of patients with physicians who share their deep values. This latter option achieves the benefits nudging patients is supposed to provide without violating the republican freedom of those patients.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Boost; Deep value pairing; Informed consent; Nudge; Republicanism

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29290004     DOI: 10.1007/s10730-017-9343-2

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


  8 in total

1.  A Defence of the Counterfactual Account of Harm.

Authors:  Craig Purshouse
Journal:  Bioethics       Date:  2015-09-30       Impact factor: 1.898

2.  Information leakage from logically equivalent frames.

Authors:  Shlomi Sher; Craig R M McKenzie
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  2005-12-20

3.  "Nudging" and informed consent revisited: why "nudging" fails in the clinical context.

Authors:  Søren Holm; Thomas Ploug
Journal:  Am J Bioeth       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 11.229

4.  Nudging, autonomy, and valid consent: context matters.

Authors:  Luke Gelinas; Franklin G Miller
Journal:  Am J Bioeth       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 11.229

5.  Nudging and informed consent.

Authors:  Shlomo Cohen
Journal:  Am J Bioeth       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 11.229

6.  Equipoise and the ethics of clinical research.

Authors:  B Freedman
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1987-07-16       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  Abandoning informed consent.

Authors:  R M Veatch
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  1995 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 2.683

8.  To nudge or not to nudge: cancer screening programmes and the limits of libertarian paternalism.

Authors:  Thomas Ploug; Søren Holm; John Brodersen
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2012-07-05       Impact factor: 3.710

  8 in total

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