Summary |
The Minimally Conscious State (MCS) is a state of diminished and disordered consciousness. It is distinct from the Vegetative State (VS) in that MCS patients do experience some level of awareness, although it remains controversial whether the concept of partial awareness or consciousness makes sense. The moral and legal status of MCS patients is contested, with a particularly noteworthy debate concerning whether consciousness makes a moral difference in right to die, end of life, and continuting care debates. With emerging technologies such as Deep Brain Stimulation being proposed as treatments that might increase the level of awareness in VS and MCS patients, there is ethical controversy about the use of these experimental therapies on unconsenting persons, as well as concerns about quality of life in states of impaired consciousness. |