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How to Make the Massachusetts Patients’ Bill of Rights Work
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2021
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At one point in Edgar Allan Poe's Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, Pym, who has stowed away in the hold of a whaling vessel, believes he has been abandoned and that the hold will be his tomb. He expresses sensations of “extreme horror and dismay,” and “the most gloomy imaginings, in which the dreadful deaths of thirst, famine, suffocation, and premature interment, crowded in as the prominent disasters to be encountered.”
It is probably uncommon for hospitalized patients to feel as gloomy as Pym. Nevertheless, installed in a strange institution, separated from friends and family, forced to wear a degrading costume, confined to bed, and attended to by a variety of strangers who may or may not keep the patient informed of what they are doing, the average patient is intimidated and disoriented. Such an atmosphere encourages dependence and discourages the assertion of individual rights.
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- Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 1980