Advance Directives Outside the USA: Are They the Best Solution Everywhere?
Author(s)
Sanchez-Gonzalez, Miguel A.Keywords
Advance Care PlanningAdvance Directives
Allowing to Die
Autonomy
Beneficence
Bioethics
Communitarianism
Contracts
Cultural Pluralism
Consent
Decision Making
Ethical Relativism
Ethics
Family Members
Guidelines
Historical Aspects
Informed Consent
International Aspects
Justice
Legal Aspects
Medicine
Moral Policy
Morality
Organizations
Patients
Patients' Rights
Personhood
Philosophy
Physician Patient Relationship
Physicians
Public Policy
Refusal to Treat
Resource Allocation
Rights
Risks and Benefits
Secularism
Third Party Consent
Trust
Utilitarianism
Values
Virtues
Withholding Treatment
Wills
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://worldcatlibraries.org/registry/gateway?version=1.0&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&atitle=Advance+Directives+outside+the+Usa:+Are+They+the+Best+Solution+everywhere?&title=Theoretical+Medicine.++&volume=18&issue=3&pages=283-301&date=1997&au=Sanchez-Gonzalez,+Miguel+A.http://hdl.handle.net/10822/754403
Abstract
This article evaluates the potential role of advance directives outside of their original North American context. In order to do this, the article first analyses the historical process which has promoted advance directives in recent years. Next, it brings to light certain presuppositions which have given them force: atomistic individualism, contractualism, consumerism and entrepreneurialism, pluralism, proceduralism, and "American moralism." The article next studies certain European cultural peculiarities which could affect advance directives: the importance of virtue versus rights, stoicism versus consumerist utilitarianism, rationalism versus empiricism, statism versus citizens' initiative, and justice versus autonomy. The article concludes by recognising that autonomy has a transcultural value, although it must be balanced with other principles. Advance Directives can have a function in certain cases. But it does not seem adequate to delegate to advance directives more and more medical decisions, and to make them more binding everyday. It is indispensable to develop other decision-making criteria.Date
2015-05-05Identifier
oai:repository.library.georgetown.edu:10822/754403Theoretical Medicine. 1997 Sep; 18(3): 283-301.
0167-9902
http://worldcatlibraries.org/registry/gateway?version=1.0&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&atitle=Advance+Directives+outside+the+Usa:+Are+They+the+Best+Solution+everywhere?&title=Theoretical+Medicine.++&volume=18&issue=3&pages=283-301&date=1997&au=Sanchez-Gonzalez,+Miguel+A.
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/754403