The Legal Development of the Informed Consent Doctrine: Past and Present

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 19 (1):97 (2010)
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Abstract

For millennia physicians were admonished to obscure the details of patients’ illnesses and poor prognoses. The Hippocratic ethic precludes physicians from including patients in medical decisionmaking. That ethic demanded of doctors that they “[p]erform [their duties] calmly and adroitly, concealing most things from the patient … revealing nothing of the patient's future or present condition.”

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