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Autonomy, Informed Consent and Medical Law: A Relational Challenge


Autonomy, Informed Consent and Medical Law: A Relational Challenge

Hardback by Maclean, Alasdair (University of Dundee)

Autonomy, Informed Consent and Medical Law: A Relational Challenge

£87.00

ISBN:
9780521896931
Publication Date:
12 Feb 2009
Language:
English
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Pages:
316 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 14 - 19 May 2024
Autonomy, Informed Consent and Medical Law: A Relational Challenge

Description

Alasdair Maclean analyses the ethical basis for consent to medical treatment, providing both an extensive reconsideration of the ethical issues and a detailed examination of English law. Importantly, the analysis is given a context by situating consent at the centre of the healthcare professional-patient relationship. This allows the development of a relational model that balances the agency of the two parties with their obligations that arise from that relationship. That relational model is then used to critique the current legal regulation of consent. To conclude, Alasdair Maclean considers the future development of the law and contrasts the model of relational consent with Neil Manson and Onora O'Neill's recent proposal for a model of genuine consent.

Contents

Introduction; Part I: 1. Autonomy; 2. The relevance of beneficence, justice and virtue; 3. The healthcare professional-patient relationship: setting the context for consent; 4. The concept of consent - what it is and what it isn't; Part II. Consent and the Law: 5. The legal regulation of consent; 6. Rationalising the law and ethics of consent; 7. Constructing consent - future regulation and the practice of healthcare; Summary and conclusion.

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