Venkat Arvind
Department of Emergency Medicine at Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Clin Ethics. 2012 Spring;23(1):71-8.
With the improvements in medical care and resultant increase in life expectancy of the intellectually disabled, it will become more common for healthcare providers to be confronted by ethical dilemmas in the care of this patient population. Many of the dilemmas will focus on what is in the best interest of patients who have never been able to express their wishes with regard to medical and end-of-life care and who should be empowered to exercise surrogate medical decision-making authority on their behalf. A case is presented that exemplifies the ethical and legal tensions surrounding surrogate medical decision making for acutely ill, never-competent, profoundly intellectually disabled patients.
随着医疗护理的改善以及由此导致的智障人士预期寿命的增加,医疗服务提供者在照顾这一患者群体时面临伦理困境的情况将变得更加普遍。许多困境将集中在那些从未能够就医疗和临终护理表达自己意愿的患者的最佳利益是什么,以及谁应该被授权代表他们行使替代医疗决策的权力。本文介绍了一个案例,该案例体现了为患有严重疾病、无行为能力、深度智障的患者进行替代医疗决策所涉及的伦理和法律冲突。