In 2016, this Journal published an article by Rob Lawlor1 on what we might call the acceptance-refusal asymmetry in competence requirements. This is the view that there can be cases in which a patient is sufficiently competent to accept a treatment ( viz., to give consent to it), but not sufficiently competent to refuse it ( viz., to withhold consent to it). Though the main purpose of Lawlor’s paper was to distinguish this asymmetry from various other asymmetries with which it has sometimes been confused,1 Lawlor also presented a brief case in favour of it. Developing an earlier argument of Ian Wilks’,2 3 Lawlor argued that, when the risks associated with refusing a treatment are graver than those associated with accepting it, a higher leve...
In this article the author examines the rationale, in legal and policy terms, of the inextricable as...
Authorities disagree as to whether and how the mental capacity required for competence to stand tria...
Disclosing a value system in a living will could be in your best interests: Whilst doctors are recog...
In 2016, this Journal published an article by Rob Lawlor1 on what we might call the acceptance-refus...
In this paper, I will argue that much of the debate concerning asymmetries between consent and refus...
In some jurisdictions there is a puzzling asymmetry of consent and refusal, where, for some kinds of...
Competence is a key concept in medical law but it is poorly understood by health care practitioners ...
Informed consent is valid only if the person giving it is competent. Although allegedly informed con...
John Harris claims that is it ‘palpable nonsense’ to suggest that ‘a child (or anyone) might compete...
Determining competence to request physician-assisted suicide should be no more difficult than determ...
In this paper I get clearer on the considerations that ought to inform the evaluation and developmen...
This article explores the relationship between competence and authority in relation to medical treat...
There is a strong academic and medical consensus on judging patients' decision-making capacity in ac...
What does it mean to respect autonomy and encourage meaningful consent to treatment in the case of p...
Meno’s paradox—which asks ‘how will you know it is the thing you didn’t know?’—appears in Plato’s di...
In this article the author examines the rationale, in legal and policy terms, of the inextricable as...
Authorities disagree as to whether and how the mental capacity required for competence to stand tria...
Disclosing a value system in a living will could be in your best interests: Whilst doctors are recog...
In 2016, this Journal published an article by Rob Lawlor1 on what we might call the acceptance-refus...
In this paper, I will argue that much of the debate concerning asymmetries between consent and refus...
In some jurisdictions there is a puzzling asymmetry of consent and refusal, where, for some kinds of...
Competence is a key concept in medical law but it is poorly understood by health care practitioners ...
Informed consent is valid only if the person giving it is competent. Although allegedly informed con...
John Harris claims that is it ‘palpable nonsense’ to suggest that ‘a child (or anyone) might compete...
Determining competence to request physician-assisted suicide should be no more difficult than determ...
In this paper I get clearer on the considerations that ought to inform the evaluation and developmen...
This article explores the relationship between competence and authority in relation to medical treat...
There is a strong academic and medical consensus on judging patients' decision-making capacity in ac...
What does it mean to respect autonomy and encourage meaningful consent to treatment in the case of p...
Meno’s paradox—which asks ‘how will you know it is the thing you didn’t know?’—appears in Plato’s di...
In this article the author examines the rationale, in legal and policy terms, of the inextricable as...
Authorities disagree as to whether and how the mental capacity required for competence to stand tria...
Disclosing a value system in a living will could be in your best interests: Whilst doctors are recog...