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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which examines the ethical
medical reality of informed consent. The paper argues that informed consent is ethically
necessary. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAcnsnt.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the average citizen we often overlook the fact that the institution of medicine and the doctors are only extensions of ourselves. People generally assume that the doctors know what is
best at all times and that consent is not necessarily something that should be an issue in the medical profession. After all, what does the average individual know about medicine?
The truth, however, is that the doctors are not gods and the medical profession makes mistakes just like any other institution or individual. And, they have no right to
assume that they always know what is best, for they only possess informed opinions after all. In light of this, and other facts, we find that informed consent is a
very important ethical element of the institution. Informed consent is something that should involve all people, doctors and laymen, in order to maintain a semblance of morality in a sometimes
arrogant institution. In the following paper we examine informed consent in the face of the medical profession, arguing that it is a very important ethical practice for all concerned.
Informed Consent It is interesting to note that "Until recently, philosophers took little interest in medical practice or physicians codes of ethics. Since the 1960s, however, they have joined
physicians, theologians, and lawyers in founding journals, research centers, hospital and medical school committees, departments, programs, and special degrees in medical ethics, primarily in North America but increasingly world-wide" (Ruddick,
2002; medethics.html). The primary topics of this focus have not only included ethical consent but also "physicians paternalistic deceptions and violations of patient confidentiality; the rights of patients or their
surrogates to refuse life-sustaining treatments or request assistance in dying; drug experiments on children, demented or dying patients, and other incompetent or desperate patients; bias-free definitions of health, death, disease,
...