Medical Screening and the Value of Early Detection When Unwarranted Faith Leads to Unethical Recommendations

Hastings Center Report 29 (1):26-37 (1999)
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Abstract

Medical screening is justified on the strength of the assumption that the earlier disease is detected, the better it is for the patient. On examination, however, the assumption turns out to be severely flawed, and inadequate anyway, since it is not only the patient with whom we should be concerned, but healthy people as well. Instead of making assumptions about the ill, we should prove a test's overall benefit to the individual taking it before we recommend it.

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