Helga Wanglie Revisited: Medical Futility and the Limits of Autonomy

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 2 (2):161 (1993)
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Abstract

There is little to indicate from, her circumstances that events would propel Helga Wanglie, an 86-year-old Minneapolis woman, into the center of public controversy. We know little of her life prior to the events that removed her from the world of conscious, sentient beings. By the time of her death on 4 July 1991, Mrs. Wanglie had become the focus of a nationwide public and professional debate on the rights of a patient in a persistent vegetative state to receive aggressive medical treatment when such treatment is felt by the patient's doctors not to be in the patient's best interests

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References found in this work

Helga Wanglie's Ventilator.Ronald E. Cranford - 1991 - Hastings Center Report 21 (4):23-24.
The Significance of a Wish.Felicia Ackerman - 1991 - Hastings Center Report 21 (4):27-29.
Autonomy, Futility, and the Limits of Medicine.Robert L. Schwartz - 1992 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1 (2):159.

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