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1.
J Clin Ethics ; 35(2): 85-92, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38728697

ABSTRACT

AbstractDespite broad ethical consensus supporting developmentally appropriate disclosure of health information to older children and adolescents, cases in which parents and caregivers request nondisclosure continue to pose moral dilemmas for clinicians. State laws vary considerably regarding adolescents' rights to autonomy, privacy, and confidentiality, with many states not specifically addressing adolescents' right to their own healthcare information. The requirements of the 21st Century Cures Act have raised important ethical concerns for pediatricians and adolescent healthcare professionals regarding the protection of adolescent privacy and confidentiality, given requirements that chart notes and results be made readily available to patients via electronic portals. Less addressed have been the implications of the act for adolescents' access to their health information, since many healthcare systems' electronic portals are available to patients beginning at age 12, sometimes requiring that the patients themselves authorize their parents' access to the same information. In this article, we present a challenging case of protracted disagreement about an adolescent's right to honest information regarding his devastating prognosis. We then review the legal framework governing adolescents' rights to their own healthcare information, the limitations of ethics consultation to resolve such disputes, and the potential for the Cures Act's impact on electronic medical record systems to provide one form of resolution. We conclude that although parents in cases like the one presented here have the legal right to consent to medical treatment on their children's behalf, they do not have a corresponding right to direct the withholding of medical information from the patient.


Subject(s)
Confidentiality , Parents , Humans , Adolescent , Confidentiality/legislation & jurisprudence , Confidentiality/ethics , Male , United States , Disclosure/legislation & jurisprudence , Disclosure/ethics , Personal Autonomy , Parental Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Parental Consent/ethics , Patient Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Child , Privacy/legislation & jurisprudence , Electronic Health Records/ethics , Electronic Health Records/legislation & jurisprudence , Access to Information/legislation & jurisprudence , Access to Information/ethics
2.
Bioethics ; 38(5): 460-468, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38470400

ABSTRACT

This article argues for a ban on the performance of medically unnecessary genital normalizing surgeries as part of assigning a binary sex/gender to infants with intersex conditions on the basis of autonomy, regardless of etiology. It does this via a dis/analogy with the classic case in bioethics of Jehovah Witness (JW) parents' inability to refuse life-saving blood transfusions for their minor children. Both cases address ethical medical practice in situations where parents are making irreversible medical decisions on the basis of values strongly held, identity, and relationship-shaping values-such as religious beliefs or beliefs regarding the inherent value of binary sex/gender-amidst ethical pluralism. Furthermore, it takes seriously-as we must in the intersex case-that the restriction of parents' right to choose will likely result in serious harms to potentially large percentage of patients, their families, and their larger communities. I address the objection that parents' capacity to choose is restricted in the JW case on the basis of the harm principle or a duty to nonmaleficence, given that the result of parent choice would be death. I provide evidence that this is mistaken from how we treat epistemic uncertainty in the JW case and from cases in which clinicians are ethically obligated to restrict the autonomy of nonminor patients. I conclude that we restrict the parents' right to choose in the JW case-and should in the case of pediatric intersex surgery-to secure patient's future autonomy.


Subject(s)
Blood Transfusion , Disorders of Sex Development , Jehovah's Witnesses , Parents , Personal Autonomy , Humans , Blood Transfusion/ethics , Male , Female , Disorders of Sex Development/surgery , Treatment Refusal/ethics , Sex Reassignment Surgery/ethics , Infant , Child , Religion and Medicine , Decision Making/ethics , Parental Consent/ethics
3.
Cient. dent. (Ed. impr.) ; 20(3): 155-160, sept.-dic. 2023.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-229902

ABSTRACT

Introducción: la profesión odontológica es una actividad orientada al cuidado de personas, entre ellos los niños, que necesitan un cuidado más específico estando en pleno desarrollo físico y emocional. Al trabajar con los niños se tiene que lidiar con la ansiedad con la que el pequeño entra por primera vez a la consulta. Para solucionar este problema, se han descrito diferentes técnicas cuya elección depende de la edad, de las necesidades del paciente y de la habilidad profesional. Estas técnicas se pueden agrupar en tres grupos: técnicas farmacológicas, técnicas comunicativas y técnicas no comunicativas. Objetivo: revisar la evidencia científica sobre los aspectos éticos y legales de las técnicas de manejo de conducta en odontopediatría. Material y método: se realizó una búsqueda en las bases de datos de PubMed/ Medline, Google Scholar y Scopus de acuerdo a unos criterios de inclusión y exclusión. Resultados: los resultados determinan que el empleo de las técnicas de manejo de conducta disminuye los niveles de ansiedad durante el tratamiento dental. El bajo nivel socioeconómico y educativo, y la utilización frecuente de videojuegos aumentan la ansiedad dental mientras la realización de deporte y una vida saludable la disminuyen. Conclusiones: entre las técnicas de manejo de conducta del paciente pediátrico, las de gestión comunicativa son las más aceptadas por los padres. Aunque no hay ninguna prohibición legal en el uso de técnicas farmacológicas o no comunicativas, estas la mayoría de las veces son rechazadas por los padres. (AU)


Introduction: The dental profession is an activity oriented to the people care, including children, who need more specific care being in full physical and emotional development. When working with children you have to deal with the anxiety with which the child first enters the consultation. To solve this problem, different techniques have been described whose choice depends on the age, patient needs and professional skills. These techniques can be grouped into three groups: pharmacological techniques, communicative techniques and noncommunicative techniques. Objective: To review scientific evidence on the ethical and legal aspects of behavioral management techniques in pediatric dentistry. Material and method: A search was performed in the databases of PubMed/ Medline, Google Scholar y Scopus, according to inclusion and exclusion criteria. Results: The results determine that the use of behavioral management techniques decreases anxiety levels during dental treatment. The low socioeconomic and educational level and the frequent use of video games increase dental anxiety while the performance of sports and a healthy life decrease it. Conclusions: Among the pediatric patient behavior management techniques, those with communicative management were the most accepted by parents. Although there is no legal prohibition on the use of pharmacological or non-communicative techniques, these are most often rejected by parents. (AU)


Subject(s)
Pediatric Dentistry , Behavior Control/ethics , Parental Notification/ethics , Parental Consent/ethics
4.
Cient. dent. (Ed. impr.) ; 20(3): 155-160, sept.-dic. 2023.
Article in Spanish | IBECS | ID: ibc-EMG-520

ABSTRACT

Introducción: la profesión odontológica es una actividad orientada al cuidado de personas, entre ellos los niños, que necesitan un cuidado más específico estando en pleno desarrollo físico y emocional. Al trabajar con los niños se tiene que lidiar con la ansiedad con la que el pequeño entra por primera vez a la consulta. Para solucionar este problema, se han descrito diferentes técnicas cuya elección depende de la edad, de las necesidades del paciente y de la habilidad profesional. Estas técnicas se pueden agrupar en tres grupos: técnicas farmacológicas, técnicas comunicativas y técnicas no comunicativas. Objetivo: revisar la evidencia científica sobre los aspectos éticos y legales de las técnicas de manejo de conducta en odontopediatría. Material y método: se realizó una búsqueda en las bases de datos de PubMed/ Medline, Google Scholar y Scopus de acuerdo a unos criterios de inclusión y exclusión. Resultados: los resultados determinan que el empleo de las técnicas de manejo de conducta disminuye los niveles de ansiedad durante el tratamiento dental. El bajo nivel socioeconómico y educativo, y la utilización frecuente de videojuegos aumentan la ansiedad dental mientras la realización de deporte y una vida saludable la disminuyen. Conclusiones: entre las técnicas de manejo de conducta del paciente pediátrico, las de gestión comunicativa son las más aceptadas por los padres. Aunque no hay ninguna prohibición legal en el uso de técnicas farmacológicas o no comunicativas, estas la mayoría de las veces son rechazadas por los padres. (AU)


Introduction: The dental profession is an activity oriented to the people care, including children, who need more specific care being in full physical and emotional development. When working with children you have to deal with the anxiety with which the child first enters the consultation. To solve this problem, different techniques have been described whose choice depends on the age, patient needs and professional skills. These techniques can be grouped into three groups: pharmacological techniques, communicative techniques and noncommunicative techniques. Objective: To review scientific evidence on the ethical and legal aspects of behavioral management techniques in pediatric dentistry. Material and method: A search was performed in the databases of PubMed/ Medline, Google Scholar y Scopus, according to inclusion and exclusion criteria. Results: The results determine that the use of behavioral management techniques decreases anxiety levels during dental treatment. The low socioeconomic and educational level and the frequent use of video games increase dental anxiety while the performance of sports and a healthy life decrease it. Conclusions: Among the pediatric patient behavior management techniques, those with communicative management were the most accepted by parents. Although there is no legal prohibition on the use of pharmacological or non-communicative techniques, these are most often rejected by parents. (AU)


Subject(s)
Pediatric Dentistry , Behavior Control/ethics , Parental Notification/ethics , Parental Consent/ethics
5.
Rev. habanera cienc. méd ; 20(2): e3440, mar.-abr. 2021. graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS, CUMED | ID: biblio-1251802

ABSTRACT

Introducción: El consentimiento informado en Pediatría, es un proceso de toma de decisiones progresivo, consensuado y dialogado, centrado en una relación tripartita (pediatra, niño y padres), en virtud de la cual, estos últimos, aceptan o no las acciones de vacunación, las cuales han mejorado la prevención de distintas enfermedades infecciosas que afectan la salud de la población infantil y provocan gran morbilidad, mortalidad y secuelas. Objetivo: Exponer los principales aspectos bioéticos relacionados con el consentimiento informado en el uso de las vacunas en Pediatría. Material y Métodos: Se realizó una revisión de la literatura en español e inglés acerca del tema utilizando motores de búsqueda como Google Académico, y se consultaron 42 artículos de libre acceso en las bases de datos SciELO y Pubmed. Se analizó la bibliografía de los últimos 20 años, fundamentalmente de los últimos 5 años, desde 2000 hasta 2020. Desarrollo: Las vacunas son intervenciones preventivas que tienen una historia centenaria que demuestra su bondad y su eficacia, pero han planteado problemas éticos desde su comienzo. El consentimiento informado para su administración no se implementa con el mismo rigor en todas las regiones del mundo. Conclusiones: La vacunación en Pediatría constituye una práctica frecuente, por lo que es necesario el uso del consentimiento informado debidamente redactado y autorizado por los tutores legales o el paciente, que incluya la explicación de los propósitos, los procedimientos a que será sometido, los posibles daños y beneficios, y los posibles resultados de la misma(AU)


Introduction: Informed consent in Pediatrics is a progressive, consensual and dialogue-based decision-making process focused on a tripartite relationship (pediatrician-child-parents), under which the latter accept or do not accept the actions towards vaccination that have improved the prevention of different infectious diseases that affect the health of the child population and cause great morbidity, mortality and sequelae. Objective: To state the main bioethical aspects related to informed consent for the use of vaccines in Pediatrics. Material and Methods: A review of literature on the topic in Spanish and English was carried out using search engines such as Google Scholar. Also, 42 open access articles were consulted in the SciELO and Pubmed databases. The bibliography of the last 20 years was analyzed. It mainly included articles published during the last 5 years (from 2000 to 2020). Development: Vaccines are preventive interventions that have a centuries-old history that demonstrates their goodness and effectiveness, but have posed ethical problems since the very beginning. Informed consent for their administration is not implemented with the same rigor in all regions of the world. Conclusions: Vaccination in Pediatrics is a frequent practice, so a duly drafted informed consent authorized by the legal guardians or the patient is necessary. It should include the explanation of the aims, the procedures to which the patient will be submitted, the possible damages and benefits, and the possible results(AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Infant, Newborn , Infant , Child, Preschool , Child , Parents/education , Patients , Pediatrics , Communicable Disease Control/methods , Vaccination/ethics , Informed Consent/ethics , Decision Making , Parental Consent/ethics
6.
Pediatrics ; 147(4)2021 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33785636

ABSTRACT

Parents are the default decision-makers for their infants and children. Their decisions should be based on the best interests of their children. Differing interpretations of children's best interests may be a source of conflict. Providers' biased evaluations of patients' quality of life may undermine medicine's trustworthiness. As children mature, they should participate in medical decision-making to the extent that is developmentally appropriate. In this month's Ethics Rounds, physicians, a philosopher, and a lawyer consider parents' demand, supported by the hospital's legal department, that their 17-year-old son be excluded from a potentially life-and-death medical decision.


Subject(s)
Decision Making/ethics , Disabled Children , Parental Consent/ethics , Tracheostomy , Adolescent , Airway Extubation/adverse effects , Humans , Male , Parental Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Postoperative Complications , Respiratory Insufficiency/etiology , Respiratory Insufficiency/therapy
7.
Pediatr Int ; 63(3): 248-259, 2021 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33638276

ABSTRACT

Ethical considerations are more stringent in pediatric clinical research than in research targeting adults. However, in Japan, clear guidelines have yet to be presented on the necessary ethical considerations for clinical research involving children. The "Principles of Ethical Consideration Required for Clinical Research Involving Children" provide guiding principles for ethical considerations and the essential ways of thinking that all involved in clinical research on children need to understand in advance.


Subject(s)
Biomedical Research , Parental Consent , Biomedical Research/ethics , Child , Humans , Japan , Parental Consent/ethics
11.
Pediatrics ; 146(3)2020 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32817267

ABSTRACT

In rare circumstances, children who have suffered traumatic brain injury from child abuse are declared dead by neurologic criteria and are eligible to donate organs. When the parents are the suspected abusers, there can be confusion about who has the legal right to authorize organ donation. Furthermore, organ donation may interfere with the collection of forensic evidence that is necessary to evaluate the abuse. Under those circumstances, particularly in the context of a child homicide investigation, the goals of organ donation and collection and preservation of critical forensic evidence may seem mutually exclusive. In this Ethics Rounds, we discuss such a case and suggest ways to resolve the apparent conflicts between the desire to procure organs for donation and the need to thoroughly evaluate the evidence of abuse.


Subject(s)
Child Abuse/ethics , Forensic Medicine/ethics , Homicide/ethics , Parental Consent/ethics , Tissue Donors/ethics , Tissue and Organ Procurement/ethics , Autopsy/ethics , Bioethical Issues , Child Abuse/legislation & jurisprudence , Child, Preschool , Family , Forensic Medicine/legislation & jurisprudence , Homicide/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Male , Parental Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Parents , Shaken Baby Syndrome/etiology , Tissue Donors/legislation & jurisprudence , Tissue and Organ Procurement/legislation & jurisprudence
12.
Pediatrics ; 146(Suppl 1): S3-S8, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32737225

ABSTRACT

One of the earliest controversies in the modern history of bioethics was known at the time as "the Hopkins Mongol case," involving an infant with Trisomy 21 and duodenal atresia whose parents declined to consent to surgery. Fluids and feeding were withheld, and the infant died of dehydration after 15 days. The child's short life had a profound impact on the author's career and that of several others and ultimately led to changes in the care of children and adults with disabilities and the way difficult end-of-life decisions are made in US hospitals today. It also contributed to the growth of the modern bioethics movement and scholarship focused on pediatric bioethics issues.


Subject(s)
Bioethical Issues , Clinical Decision-Making/ethics , Down Syndrome/therapy , Pediatrics/ethics , Withholding Treatment/ethics , Advisory Committees/ethics , Bioethical Issues/history , Bioethical Issues/legislation & jurisprudence , Disabled Children/legislation & jurisprudence , Down Syndrome/history , Esophageal Atresia/history , Esophageal Atresia/therapy , Foundations , History, 20th Century , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Parental Consent/ethics , Parental Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Parents , Pediatrics/legislation & jurisprudence , Terminal Care/ethics , Withholding Treatment/legislation & jurisprudence
13.
Pediatrics ; 146(Suppl 1): S13-S17, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32737227

ABSTRACT

Although parents are typically the most appropriate decision-makers for their children, there are limits to this authority. Medical providers may be ethically obligated to seek state intervention against a parental decision if the parent places a child at significant and imminent risk of serious harm. When parents make medical decisions for their children, they assess both the projected benefits and risks of their choices for their family. These assessments are impacted by uncertainty, which is a common feature of neonatal intensive care. The relative presence or absence of uncertainty may impact perceptions of parental decisions and a medical provider's decision to seek state intervention to overrule parents. In this article, we propose a model integrating prognostic uncertainty into pediatric decision-making that may aid providers in such assessments. We will demonstrate how to apply this model to 3 neonatal cases and propose that the presence of greater uncertainty ought to permit parents greater latitude to incorporate family values into their decision-making even if these decisions are contradictory to the recommendations of the medical team.


Subject(s)
Bioethical Issues , Clinical Decision-Making/ethics , Parents , Uncertainty , Family , Female , Gestational Age , Humans , Hypoxia-Ischemia, Brain/etiology , Infant, Newborn , Intensive Care Units, Neonatal , Male , Palliative Care , Parental Consent/ethics , Prognosis , Pulmonary Valve Stenosis/surgery , Social Values , Withholding Treatment/ethics
14.
Pediatrics ; 146(Suppl 1): S25-S32, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32737229

ABSTRACT

In this article, I examine the role of minors' competence for medical decision-making in modern American law. The doctrine of parental consent remains the default legal and bioethical framework for health care decisions on behalf of children, complemented by a complex array of exceptions. Some of those exceptions vest decisional authority in the minors themselves. Yet, in American law, judgments of minors' competence do not typically trigger shifts in decision-making authority from adults to minors. Rather, minors' decisional capacity becomes relevant only after legislatures or courts determine that the default of parental discretion does not achieve important policy goals or protect implicated constitutional rights in a particular health care context and that those goals can best be achieved or rights best protected by authorizing capable minors to choose for themselves. It is at that point that psychological and neuroscientific evidence plays an important role in informing the legal inquiry as to whether minors whose health is at issue are legally competent to decide.


Subject(s)
Clinical Decision-Making , Mental Competency/legislation & jurisprudence , Minors/legislation & jurisprudence , Parental Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Adolescent , Adolescent Development , Child , Child Development , Child Health Services/legislation & jurisprudence , Child Rearing , Child Welfare/legislation & jurisprudence , Civil Rights , Clinical Decision-Making/ethics , Family , Health Services Accessibility/legislation & jurisprudence , Humans , Informed Consent By Minors/ethics , Informed Consent By Minors/legislation & jurisprudence , Mental Competency/standards , Minors/psychology , Parent-Child Relations , Parental Consent/ethics , Patient Self-Determination Act , Personal Autonomy , Proxy/legislation & jurisprudence , Treatment Refusal/legislation & jurisprudence , United States
15.
Pediatrics ; 146(Suppl 1): S33-S41, 2020 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32737230

ABSTRACT

Cases of adolescents in organ failure who refuse solid organ transplant are not common, but several have been discussed in the media in the United States and the United Kingdom. Using the framework developed by Buchanan and Brock for surrogate decision-making, I examine what role the adolescent should morally play when deciding about therapy for life-threatening conditions. I argue that the greater the efficacy of treatment, the less voice the adolescent (and the parent) should have. I then consider how refusals of highly effective transplant cases are similar to and different from refusals of other lifesaving therapies (eg, chemotherapy for leukemia), which is more commonly discussed in the media and medical literature. I examine whether organ scarcity and the need for lifelong immunosuppression justify differences in whether the state intervenes when an adolescent and his or her parents refuse a transplant. I argue that the state, as parens patriae, has an obligation to provide the social supports needed for a successful transplant and follow-up treatment plan, although family refusals may be permissible when the transplant is experimental or of low efficacy because of comorbidities or other factors. I conclude by discussing the need to limit media coverage of pediatric treatment refusals.


Subject(s)
Bioethical Issues , Mass Media/ethics , Organ Transplantation/ethics , Parental Consent/ethics , Treatment Refusal/ethics , Adolescent , Family , Female , Humans , Informed Consent By Minors/ethics , Informed Consent By Minors/legislation & jurisprudence , Male , Organ Transplantation/legislation & jurisprudence , Parental Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Patient Participation , Patient Self-Determination Act , Principle-Based Ethics , Treatment Refusal/legislation & jurisprudence , Twins, Monozygotic , United Kingdom , United States
17.
J Law Med Ethics ; 48(1): 188-201, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32342775

ABSTRACT

Critical ethical questions arise concerning whether studies among adolescents of new behavioral and biomedical HIV preventive interventions such as Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP) should obtain parental permission. This paper examines the relevant regulations and ethical guidance concerning waivers of parental permission, and arguments for and against such waivers. Opponents of such waivers may argue that adolescent decision-making is "too immature" and that parents always have rights to decide how to protect their children. Yet requiring parental permission may put adolescents at risk, and/or limit adolescent participation, jeopardizing study findings' validity. This paper presents recommendations on when researchers and Institutional Review Boards (IRB) should waive parental permission, and what special protections should be adopted for adolescents who consent for themselves, e.g., assuring adolescent privacy and confidentiality, screening for capacity to consent, and identifying adolescents who are at elevated risk from study participation. We also present a series of specific areas for future research to design tools to help make these assessments, and to inform researcher and IRB decisions. These recommendations can help ensure that research is conducted that can aid adolescents at risk for HIV, while minimizing risks and protecting these individuals' rights as much as possible.


Subject(s)
HIV Infections/prevention & control , Informed Consent By Minors/ethics , Informed Consent By Minors/legislation & jurisprudence , Parental Consent/ethics , Parental Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Research Subjects , Adolescent , Decision Making , Ethics Committees, Research , Humans , Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis , Research Personnel , United States
18.
Pediatrics ; 145(4)2020 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32220905

ABSTRACT

The American Academy of Neurology believes that doctors have the right to do tests to evaluate whether a patient is brain dead even if the family does not consent. They argue that physicians have "both the moral authority and professional responsibility" to do such evaluations, just as they have the authority and responsibility to declare someone dead by circulatory criteria. Not everyone agrees. Truog and Tasker argue that apnea testing to confirm brain death has risks and that, for some families, those risks may outweigh the benefits. So, what should doctors do when caring for a patient whom they believe to be brain dead but whose parents refuse to allow testing to confirm that the patient meets neurologic criteria for death? In this article, we analyze the issues that arise when parents refuse such testing.


Subject(s)
Brain Death/diagnosis , Neurologic Examination/psychology , Parental Consent , Adolescent , Attitude to Death , Bioethical Issues , Brain Death/physiopathology , Clinical Decision-Making , Humans , Male , Medical Futility/legislation & jurisprudence , Medical Futility/psychology , Neurologic Examination/ethics , Parental Consent/ethics , Parental Consent/legislation & jurisprudence , Parents , Religion and Psychology , Suicide
19.
Pediatrics ; 145(2)2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31974217

ABSTRACT

Many transgender and gender-diverse people have a gender identity that does not conform to the binary categories of male or female; they have a nonbinary gender. Some nonbinary individuals are most comfortable with an androgynous gender expression. For those who have not yet fully progressed through puberty, puberty suppression with gonadotrophin-releasing hormone agonists can support an androgynous appearance. Although such treatment is shown to ameliorate the gender dysphoria and serious mental health issues commonly seen in transgender and gender-diverse young people, long-term use of puberty-suppressing medications carries physical health risks and raises various ethical dilemmas. In this Ethics Rounds, we analyze a case that raised issues about prolonged pubertal suppression for a patient with a nonbinary gender.


Subject(s)
Gender Dysphoria/drug therapy , Informed Consent By Minors/ethics , Parental Consent/ethics , Puberty/drug effects , Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators/therapeutic use , Sexual and Gender Minorities/psychology , Adolescent , Anxiety/drug therapy , Bioethical Issues , Bone Density/drug effects , Clinical Decision-Making/ethics , Drug Administration Schedule , Ethics, Medical , Gender Dysphoria/psychology , Hip Fractures/etiology , Humans , Personal Autonomy
20.
Bioethics ; 34(5): 502-508, 2020 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31697399

ABSTRACT

Children are presumptively regarded as incompetent to make their own medical decisions, and the responsibility for making such decisions typically falls to parents. Parental authority is not unlimited, however, and ethical guidelines identifying appropriate bounds on this authority are needed. One proposal currently gaining support is the harm threshold (HT), which asserts that the state may only legitimately intervene in parental decision-making when serious and preventable harm to children is likely. This paper considers two questions: in virtue of what underlying principle or property does the HT gain its purported justification?; and does this underlying principle or property ground the HT as its proponents conceive of it? I identify two separate grounds represented in the literature: (a) J.S. Mill's Harm Principle; and (b) the liberty interests of parents. I find that the HT is not sufficiently grounded in either of these, revealing a substantial conceptual difficulty for its advocates.


Subject(s)
Decision Making/ethics , Ethical Analysis , Government , Minors , Parental Consent/ethics , Principle-Based Ethics , Adult , Child , Harm Reduction , Humans , Moral Obligations
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