The doctrine of informed consent rests on empirical claims. This is true particularly of what commentators have characterized as the strong model of informed consent. This model assumes that if adequate information is given to a competent individual, understanding will result and, permitted to make a voluntary decision, the individual will make a rational decision. However, the therapeutic misconception posits that individuals may confuse the goals of research with those of treatment and may make decisions that do not rest on adequate understanding. This article reviews research suggesting that this may in fact be true, and concludes that, as a result, traditional notions of informed consent may not yield results consistent with the ass...
© 2011 Damien John CremeanMuch of modern medicine is founded on the doctrine of informed consent. I ...
The process of obtaining informed consent is designed to operationalize respect forautonomy. Informe...
Informed consent is one of the great puzzles of modern medical research and practice. As Professor H...
BACKGROUND: The therapeutic misconception occurs when a research subject fails to appreciate the dis...
Informed consent is a widely acknowledged ethical principle that plays a crucial role, both in resea...
Biomedical ethics require that research subjects be aware that the drugs they take or procedures the...
Informed consent has traditionally focused on treatment-related issues. However, since the mid-1990s...
This Article examines the importance of patient autonomy and competence in medical decision making a...
The article addresses the frequency and risk factors of therapeutic misconceptions in clinical resea...
Practice and law around informed consent in healthcare have undergone a revolution for the better ov...
The current doctrine of informed consent falls far short of its potential to serve as a valuable saf...
Responding to the paper by Miller and Joffe, we review the development of the concept of therapeutic...
The authors draw together the disparate scholarly and judicial commentaries on consent to medical tr...
Although the principle of informed consent is well established and its importance widely acknowledge...
The doctrine of informed consent, defined as respect for autonomy, is the tool used to govern the re...
© 2011 Damien John CremeanMuch of modern medicine is founded on the doctrine of informed consent. I ...
The process of obtaining informed consent is designed to operationalize respect forautonomy. Informe...
Informed consent is one of the great puzzles of modern medical research and practice. As Professor H...
BACKGROUND: The therapeutic misconception occurs when a research subject fails to appreciate the dis...
Informed consent is a widely acknowledged ethical principle that plays a crucial role, both in resea...
Biomedical ethics require that research subjects be aware that the drugs they take or procedures the...
Informed consent has traditionally focused on treatment-related issues. However, since the mid-1990s...
This Article examines the importance of patient autonomy and competence in medical decision making a...
The article addresses the frequency and risk factors of therapeutic misconceptions in clinical resea...
Practice and law around informed consent in healthcare have undergone a revolution for the better ov...
The current doctrine of informed consent falls far short of its potential to serve as a valuable saf...
Responding to the paper by Miller and Joffe, we review the development of the concept of therapeutic...
The authors draw together the disparate scholarly and judicial commentaries on consent to medical tr...
Although the principle of informed consent is well established and its importance widely acknowledge...
The doctrine of informed consent, defined as respect for autonomy, is the tool used to govern the re...
© 2011 Damien John CremeanMuch of modern medicine is founded on the doctrine of informed consent. I ...
The process of obtaining informed consent is designed to operationalize respect forautonomy. Informe...
Informed consent is one of the great puzzles of modern medical research and practice. As Professor H...