Must Consent Be Informed? Patient rights, state authority, and the moral basis of the physician's duties of disclosure.

IF 1.1 4区 哲学 Q3 ETHICS
D Robert MacDougall
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Legal standards of disclosure in a variety of jurisdictions require physicians to inform patients about the likely consequences of treatment, as a condition for obtaining the patient's consent. Such a duty to inform is special insofar as extensive disclosure of risks and potential benefits is not usually a condition for obtaining consent in non-medical transactions.What could morally justify the physician's special legal duty to inform? I argue that existing justifications have tried but failed to ground such special duties directly in basic and general rights, such as autonomy rights. As an alternative to such direct justifications, I develop an indirect justification of physicians' special duties from an argument in Kant's political philosophy. Kant argues that pre-legal rights to freedom are the source of a duty to form a state. The state has the authority to conclusively determine what counts as "consent" in various kinds of transactions. The Kantian account can subsequently indirectly justify at least one legal standard imposing a duty to inform, the reasonable person standard, but rules out one interpretation of a competitor, the subjective standard.

同意必须被告知吗?病人的权利,国家的权力,以及医生披露义务的道德基础。
在不同的司法管辖区,披露的法律标准要求医生告知患者治疗的可能后果,作为获得患者同意的条件。这种告知义务是特殊的,因为广泛披露风险和潜在利益通常不是在非医疗交易中获得同意的条件。什么能在道德上证明医生告知的特殊法律义务是正当的?我认为,现有的理由试图将这种特殊义务直接置于基本和一般权利(如自治权)之上,但未能成功。作为这种直接论证的替代方案,我从康德政治哲学中的一个论证中发展出一种对医生特殊职责的间接论证。康德认为,法律之前的自由权利是形成国家的义务的来源。在各种交易中,国家有权最终确定什么是“同意”。康德的解释随后可以间接证明至少一种强加告知义务的法律标准,即理性人标准,但排除了对竞争对手的一种解释,即主观标准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: The Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal offers a scholarly forum for diverse views on major issues in bioethics, such as analysis and critique of principlism, feminist perspectives in bioethics, the work of the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments, active euthanasia, genetics, health care reform, and organ transplantation. Each issue includes "Scope Notes," an overview and extensive annotated bibliography on a specific topic in bioethics, and "Bioethics Inside the Beltway," a report written by a Washington insider updating bioethics activities on the federal level.
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