Literature DB >> 9232512

The best-interests standard as threshold, ideal, and standard of reasonableness.

L M Kopelman1.   

Abstract

The best-interests standard is a widely used ethical, legal, and social basis for policy and decision-making involving children and other incompetent persons. It is under attack, however, as self-defeating, individualistic, unknowable, vague, dangerous, and open to abuse. The author defends this standard by identifying its employment, first, as a threshold for intervention and judgment (as in child abuse and neglect rulings), second, as an ideal to establish policies or prima facie duties, and, third, as a standard of reasonableness. Criticisms of the best-interests standard are reconsidered after clarifying these different meanings.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Legal Approach; Professional Patient Relationship

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9232512     DOI: 10.1093/jmp/22.3.271

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Philos        ISSN: 0360-5310


  31 in total

1.  Is it in a neonate's best interest to enter a randomised controlled trial?

Authors:  P Allmark; S Mason; A B Gill; C Megone
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2001-04       Impact factor: 2.903

2.  The not unreasonable standard for assessment of surrogates and surrogate decisions.

Authors:  Rosamond Rhodes; Ian R Holzman
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2004

3.  Interests and neonates: there is more to the story than we explicitly acknowledge.

Authors:  D Micah Hester
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2007

4.  Using a new analysis of the best interests standard to address cultural disputes: whose data, which values?

Authors:  Loretta M Kopelman; Arthur E Kopelman
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2007

5.  Genetic testing in asymptomatic minors: background considerations towards ESHG Recommendations.

Authors:  Pascal Borry; Gerry Evers-Kiebooms; Martina C Cornel; Angus Clarke; Kris Dierickx
Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2009-03-11       Impact factor: 4.246

Review 6.  An ethically-justifiable, practical approach to decision-making surrounding conjoined-twin separation.

Authors:  Alana Thomas; Karen Johnson; Frank X Placencia
Journal:  Semin Perinatol       Date:  2018-07-26       Impact factor: 3.300

7.  Is it in the best interests of an intellectually disabled infant to die?

Authors:  D Wilkinson
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2006-08       Impact factor: 2.903

8.  Choosing for and with children: consent, assent and working with children in the primary care setting.

Authors:  Paquita de Zulueta
Journal:  London J Prim Care (Abingdon)       Date:  2010-07

9.  Intervention principles in pediatric health care: the difference between physicians and the state.

Authors:  D Robert MacDougall
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2019-08

10.  Ethical considerations about changing parental attitude towards end-of-life care in twins with lethal disease.

Authors:  Mohamad-Hani Temsah
Journal:  Sudan J Paediatr       Date:  2018
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