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Barriers to Informed Consent in Japan

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Author(s)
Asai, Atsushi
Keywords
Informed Consent
Japan
bioethics
patients
physicians
GE Subjects
Political ethics
Ethics of law
Rights based legal ethics
Bioethics
Community ethics
Lifestyle ethics

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/226739
Online Access
http://www.eubios.info/EJ64/EJ64B.htm
Abstract
"In the Japanese clinical setting, informed consent has not been well adopted although the idea is no longer novel and the bioethics movement is well known. There are several barriers to informed consent in Japan. It is possible that both patients and physicians do not know the idea or misunderstand it. Some may think that informed consent can be obtained from a patient who does not know his or her diagnosis or from family members of a competent patient. Because of no history to develop informed consent, the ethical principle of patient self-determination can be lost in Japan. Paternalistic physicians and protective family members would counteract informed consent and try to make medical decisions to promote their patients' well being independent of their wishes and values. Dependent attitudes of some patients who never ask medical information and expect their physicians to consider all they need would make the idea of self-determination irrelevant in Japan."
Date
1996
Type
Article
Copyright/License
With permission of the license/copyright holder
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