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Privileging the medical norm: liberalism, self-determination and refusal of treatment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Extract
In the last twenty-five years consent has emerged as central to ethical and legal thinking on medical treatment. The meaning of consent and its importance and applicability in the medical context has been tested by scholars and judges in most western jurisdictions. This essay seeks to re-examine the role of consent in medical law in England having regard to a recent series of cases concerning the refusal of treatment. By linking the law, as it has emerged from these decisions, with that developed in the 1980s concerning the doctrine of informed consent it should be possible to draw some conclusions regarding the role of law and the courts in medicine. Throughout we shall be contrasting the supposedly traditional and outdated paternalism of the medical profession with the liberal, pro-autonomy strategies of (mainly) academic commentators.
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References
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42. It might be worth adding that C survived his refusal without any significant deterioration in health: Speech of Mr Mike Hinchliffe (Official Solicitor's Office) to British Medical Association conference ‘Statements, Directives and Dialogue’, London, 5 April 1995.
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59. Riverside Mental Health Trust v Fox [1994] 1 FLR 614, (1994) 2 Med L Rev 93 (CA).
60. JA Devereux, DPH Jones & DL Dickenson ‘Can Children Withhold Consent to Treatment?’ (1993) 306 British Medical Journal 1459–1460 (1460). The latter is specifically a discussion of the refusal of treatment by children, but it is submitted that the ‘best interests’ of adult and minor patients are treated as roughly similar.
61. ‘[An ideal type] is not a description of reality but it aims to give unambiguous means of expression to such a description. [It] is formed by the one-sided accentuation of one or more points of view and by the synthesis of a great many diffuse, discrete, more or less present or occasionally absent concrete individual phenomena, which are arranged according to those one-sidedly emphasized viewpoints into a unified analytical construct (Gedankenbild). In its conceptual purity, this mental construct (Gedankenbild) cannot be found empirically anywhere in reality. It is a utopia’: M Weber The Methodology of the Social Sciences (trans EA Shils & HA Finch] (New York: Free Press 1949) p 90 (emphasis in original).
62. For a critical review of these changes, cf D Hughes ‘The Reorganization of the National Health Service: The Rhetoric and the Reality of the Internal Market’ (1991) 54 MLR 88–103.
63. [1992] 2 SCR 226, (1992) 92 DLR (4th) 449 (SCC).
64. [1992] 2 SCR 138. (1992) 93 DLR (4th) 415 (SCC), For further discussion of this case, cf BM Dickens ‘Medical Records - Patient's Right to Receive Copies - Physician's Fiduciary of Disclosure: Mclnerney v MacDonald (1994) 73 Can Bar Rev 234–242.
65. Norberg v Wynrib [1992] 2 SCR 138, (1992) 93 DLR (4th) 415 (SCC per McLachlin J at 486a) emphasis in original.
66. [1992] 2 SCR 138, (1992) 93 DLR (4th) 415 (SCC per McLachlin J at 499c-d).
67. [1992] 2 SCR 138, (1992) 93 DLR (4th) 415 (SCC).
68. [1992] 2 SCR 226, (1992) 92 DLR (4th) 449 (SCC).
69. A Grubb ‘The Doctor as Fiduciary’ (1994) 47 Current Legal Problems 311–340(337).
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