No means no: A case study on respecting patient autonomy

Clinical Ethics (forthcoming)
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Abstract

This case study examines the circumstance of a patient who has clearly articulated non-treatment preferences and who then later becomes incapacitated. The patient's wife as well as a consulting physician both expressed a preference for full treatment at the time of this incapacity. The analysis of this circumstance is pertinent given misinformed beliefs by health care providers that once a patient is incapacitated, the family is free to override prior values and preferences. The analysis discusses the autonomy, beneficence, and virtue-based considerations as to why a formerly capacitated patient who has not recanted his non-treatment preferences should be obeyed.

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Nathan Stout
University Hospitals, Cleveland Medical Center

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