Patients' ethical obligation for their health

Journal of Medical Ethics 10 (3):138-142 (1984)
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Abstract

In contemporary medical ethics health is rarely acknowledged to be an ethical obligation. This oversight is due to the preoccupation of most bioethicists with a rationalist, contract model for ethics in which moral obligation is limited to truth-telling and promise-keeping. Such an ethics is poorly suited to medicine because it fails to appreciate that medicine's basis as a moral enterprise is oriented towards health values. A naturalistic model for medical ethics is proposed which builds upon biological and medical values. This perspective clarifies ethical obligations to ourselves and to others for life and health. It provides a normative framework for the doctor-patient relationship within which to formulate medical advice and by which to evaluate patient choice

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Citations of this work

Smokers' rights to health care.R. Persaud - 1995 - Journal of Medical Ethics 21 (5):281-287.
Taking patient virtue seriously.J. K. Miles - 2019 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 40 (2):141-149.

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