当例外是规则:苏格兰法律中医疗例外的合理化

Jonathan Brown
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引用次数: 1

摘要

对病人进行合法医疗手术的医生不构成刑事犯罪或不法行为。尽管侵犯另一个人的身体完整显然既是一种犯罪,也是一种民事错误,但情况仍然如此。尽管患者可能希望进行手术,但同意的“辩护”不可能证明在截肢过程中故意造成的严重伤害是正当的,因为这一过程具有高度侵入性,并对患者的身体产生不可逆转的变化。因此,援引"医疗例外"来排除对实施涉及严重伤害的程序的医生的起诉。医疗例外的正当理由究竟在哪里仍然存在争议。长期以来,由于外科作为一种职业的存在,这种例外一直被证明是合理的,否则就被认为具有自成一体的特征。然而,在此,它提出其在苏格兰法理学的基础,可以在“伤害”一词的词源中找到。伤害罪的核心是维护和维护良好的道德。侮辱一个人的尊严的行为可以明确地归类为违反善意的行为,但很明显,即使在对个人没有主观侮辱的情况下,侮辱也可能发生。这为医疗例外提供了一个合理的解释:"适当的医疗"不违反道德,因此不能说构成伤害或攻击。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
When the Exception is the Rule: Rationalising the Medical Exception in Scots Law
No physician who performs a legitimate medical operation on a patient commits a criminal offence or a delict. This is so in spite of the fact that to infringe the bodily integrity of another person is plainly both a crime and a civil wrong. Notwithstanding the fact that the patient may desire the operation, the 'defence' of consent cannot possibly justify the serious injuries intentionally inflicted in the course of, (say) an amputation, since this procedure is highly invasive and effects irreversible changes to the patient's physicality. The 'medical exception' is consequently invoked to preclude prosecution of medical practitioners who carry out procedures which involve serious wounding. Quite where the justification for the medical exception lies remains controversial. The exception has long been justified axiomatically, by reference to the existence of surgery as a profession, or has otherwise been held to be of sui generis character. Herein, however, it is submitted that its basis in Scots jurisprudence, can be found in the etymology of the term 'injury'. At its core, the crime/delict of injury served to preserve and uphold boni mores – good morals. Conduct which contumeliously affronted the dignity of a person could clearly be classified contra bonos mores, but it is apparent that iniuria may be effected even in instances in which there could be no subjective affront to the individual person. This provides a rationalisation for the medical exception: 'Proper medical treatment' is not contra bonos mores and so cannot be said to amount to injury or assault.
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