When Negative Rights Become Positive Entitlements: Complicity, Conscience, and Caregiving

Journal of Clinical Ethics 23 (4):308-315 (2012)
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Abstract

Clinicians have an obligation to ensure that patients with adequate capacity can make autonomous decisions. Thus, patients who choose to forego treatment and leave hospitals “against medical advice” are typically allowed to do so. But what happens when they require clinicians’ assistance to physically leave? Is it incumbent upon clinicians to not only respect and fulfill patients’ requests with which they disagree, but to physically assist in their fulfillment? We attempt to develop an ethical framework wherein clinicians can honor patients’ wishes without necessarily sacrificing their own moral position.

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Author Profiles

Joseph Fins
Cornell University
Aqib Khan
University of Birmingham

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