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The Need for Informed Consent: Lessons from the Ancient Greeks
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 February 2006
Extract
Some time ago, Ian Kennedy asked whether consent was
the great bulwark of “patient's rights”? Is it a necessary nuisance granted as a concession to modish thinking? Is it simply a figment of some lawyer's (or—awful word—medical ethicist's) imagination which practitioners know is meaningless in practice? Is it just part of the rhetoric of “patient power”, sent to try doctors' patience and challenge their authority?I thank Professor Matti Häyry for his extremely perceptive and helpful comments, which have added much to this paper.
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- SPECIAL SECTION: THE POWER OF CHOICE: AUTONOMY, INFORMED CONSENT, AND THE RIGHT TO REFUSE
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- © 2006 Cambridge University Press
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