This paper considers the meaning of decision-making, including substitute decisionmaking, for persons with dementia. The paper discusses the historical development of adult guardianship, from the King’s stewardship of the property of “fools” and “lunatics” to the modern mechanisms of substitute decision-making, and the relationship between substitute decision-making and a particular ideal of autonomy. The paper concludes with a discussion of Bentley v Maplewood Seniors Care Society, a case concerning the present choices of a woman with dementia, the decisions set out in the “living will” she drafted many years earlier (prior to dementia), and the decisions made by the woman’s (purported) representatives on her behalf. Th e case invites us t...
What does it mean to respect autonomy and encourage meaningful consent to treatment in the case of p...
Journal ArticlePatients with dementia present difficult issues for health-care decisionmaking. This ...
This article addresses the dilemmas concerning legislation, individual autonomy and the reality of e...
This paper considers the meaning of decision-making, including substitute decisionmaking, for person...
Healthcare providers often rely on surrogates to decide on behalf of their patients with dementia wh...
The current discourse around supported decision making and the Convention on the Rights of persons W...
Open AccessBackground Many countries have passed laws giving patients the right to participate in de...
As people, especially older people, begin to develop dementia, we confront ethical questions about w...
Individuals and societies have interacted with people with dementia in different ways for as long as...
Because dementia can cause individuals to make decisions that they otherwise would not, the law need...
Background: For people living with dementia, the capacity to make important decisions about themselv...
OBJECTIVE: The objectives of this systematic review were to: 1) understand how people living with de...
Background Many countries have passed laws giving patients the right to participate ...
The question of when we have justification for overriding ordinary, everyday decisions of persons wi...
dissertationIncreasingly, law, ethics, and policy recognize the right of individuals with impaired d...
What does it mean to respect autonomy and encourage meaningful consent to treatment in the case of p...
Journal ArticlePatients with dementia present difficult issues for health-care decisionmaking. This ...
This article addresses the dilemmas concerning legislation, individual autonomy and the reality of e...
This paper considers the meaning of decision-making, including substitute decisionmaking, for person...
Healthcare providers often rely on surrogates to decide on behalf of their patients with dementia wh...
The current discourse around supported decision making and the Convention on the Rights of persons W...
Open AccessBackground Many countries have passed laws giving patients the right to participate in de...
As people, especially older people, begin to develop dementia, we confront ethical questions about w...
Individuals and societies have interacted with people with dementia in different ways for as long as...
Because dementia can cause individuals to make decisions that they otherwise would not, the law need...
Background: For people living with dementia, the capacity to make important decisions about themselv...
OBJECTIVE: The objectives of this systematic review were to: 1) understand how people living with de...
Background Many countries have passed laws giving patients the right to participate ...
The question of when we have justification for overriding ordinary, everyday decisions of persons wi...
dissertationIncreasingly, law, ethics, and policy recognize the right of individuals with impaired d...
What does it mean to respect autonomy and encourage meaningful consent to treatment in the case of p...
Journal ArticlePatients with dementia present difficult issues for health-care decisionmaking. This ...
This article addresses the dilemmas concerning legislation, individual autonomy and the reality of e...