This paper argues that doctors ought to make all things considered value judgments about what is best for their patients. It illustrates some of the shortcomings of the model of doctor as 'fact-provider'. The 'fact-provider' model fails to take account of the fact that practising medicine necessarily involves making value judgments; that medical practice is a moral practice and requires that doctors reflect on what ought to be done, and that patients can make choices which fail to express their autonomy and which are based on mistaken judgments of value. If doctors are properly to respect patient autonomy and to function as moral agents, they must make evaluations of what their patients ought to do, all things considered. This paper argues ...
The Declaration of Geneva was recently revised to emphasize patient autonomy and the importance of c...
Patient-doctor relationship has traditionally been paternalistic, in which the doctor decided on beh...
Three frequent problems of daily medical practice are analyzed: (1) a physician's perceived obligati...
People talk about medical and health care as a relationship between a doctor and a patient in which ...
Paternalism becomes an issue in difficult situations when a physician in some way intentionally affe...
It seems obvious that in a post-modern, constructivist world where meaning and value systems are oft...
For centuries, physicians have been allowed to interfere and overrule patient’s preferences with the...
I contrast Robert Veatch's recent liberal vision of medical decision-making with a more rationalist ...
The concept of paternalism is deeply entrenched in health care. Decision-making about health care ca...
Given the practical nature of these problems – that they are a common occurrence in medicine – it is...
The health care formulation of the principle of autonomy can be expressed as follows; ‘you shall not...
Background: Libertarian paternalism is a concept derived from cognitive psychology and behavioural s...
Paternalism and autonomy are typically conceptualized as opposing theoretical frameworks. With resp...
ABSTRACT. Despite its virtues, lay decision-making in medicine shares with professional decision-mak...
In the secular Western tradition, three frameworks are recognizable as offering guidance for ethical...
The Declaration of Geneva was recently revised to emphasize patient autonomy and the importance of c...
Patient-doctor relationship has traditionally been paternalistic, in which the doctor decided on beh...
Three frequent problems of daily medical practice are analyzed: (1) a physician's perceived obligati...
People talk about medical and health care as a relationship between a doctor and a patient in which ...
Paternalism becomes an issue in difficult situations when a physician in some way intentionally affe...
It seems obvious that in a post-modern, constructivist world where meaning and value systems are oft...
For centuries, physicians have been allowed to interfere and overrule patient’s preferences with the...
I contrast Robert Veatch's recent liberal vision of medical decision-making with a more rationalist ...
The concept of paternalism is deeply entrenched in health care. Decision-making about health care ca...
Given the practical nature of these problems – that they are a common occurrence in medicine – it is...
The health care formulation of the principle of autonomy can be expressed as follows; ‘you shall not...
Background: Libertarian paternalism is a concept derived from cognitive psychology and behavioural s...
Paternalism and autonomy are typically conceptualized as opposing theoretical frameworks. With resp...
ABSTRACT. Despite its virtues, lay decision-making in medicine shares with professional decision-mak...
In the secular Western tradition, three frameworks are recognizable as offering guidance for ethical...
The Declaration of Geneva was recently revised to emphasize patient autonomy and the importance of c...
Patient-doctor relationship has traditionally been paternalistic, in which the doctor decided on beh...
Three frequent problems of daily medical practice are analyzed: (1) a physician's perceived obligati...