Patients' ethical obligation for their health
Autor: | R C Sider, C D Clements |
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Rok vydání: | 1984 |
Předmět: |
Male
Moral Obligations medicine.medical_specialty Health (social science) Social Values Normative ethics education Meta-ethics Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous) Information ethics Medicine Humans Military medical ethics Ethics Medical Physician-Patient Relations Social Responsibility business.industry Nursing ethics Health Policy Middle Aged Applied ethics humanities Issues ethics and legal aspects Moral obligation Engineering ethics Female Patient Participation business Social psychology Attitude to Health Medical ethics Research Article |
Zdroj: | Journal of medical ethics. 10(3) |
ISSN: | 0306-6800 |
Popis: | 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.The authors believe that too little attention has been paid to the proposition that individuals have an ethical obligation for their health, and to how best to characterize the nature and moral force of this obligation. While Samuel Gorovitz and others argue against a primary obligation to oneself for health, Sider and Clements defend the view that such an obligation is a fundamental constituent of human morality. They claim that health is a responsibility owed to oneself and to others, particularly family members, and one that determines the nature of the physician patient relationship. Acknowledging that their position runs counter to most of contemporary medical ethics and its preoccupation with patients' rights, truth telling, and contracts, the authors argue that health is a basic human good, and that maintaining health is a moral duty. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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