Some limits of informed consent
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Open Access
- 1 February 2003
- journal article
- symposium on-consent-and-confidentiality
- Published by BMJ in Journal of Medical Ethics
- Vol. 29 (1) , 4-7
- https://doi.org/10.1136/jme.29.1.4
Abstract
Many accounts of informed consent in medical ethics claim that it is valuable because it supports individual autonomy. Unfortunately there are many distinct conceptions of individual autonomy, and their ethical importance varies. A better reason for taking informed consent seriously is that it provides assurance that patients and others are neither deceived nor coerced. Present debates about the relative importance ofgenericandspecificconsent (particularly in the use of human tissues for research and in secondary studies) do not address this issue squarely. Consent is a propositional attitude, so intransitive: complete, wholly specific consent is an illusion. Since the point of consent procedures is to limit deception and coercion, they should be designed to give patients and others control over the amount of information they receive and opportunity to rescind consent already given.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Autonomy and Trust in BioethicsPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2002
- The Theory and Practice of AutonomyPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1988