Refusal of care: patients' well-being and physicians' ethical obligations: "but doctor, I want to go home"
- PMID: 16896112
- DOI: 10.1001/jama.296.6.691
Refusal of care: patients' well-being and physicians' ethical obligations: "but doctor, I want to go home"
Abstract
Honoring patients' wishes becomes difficult when doing so threatens their well-being. In this article, the case of a hospitalized elderly woman is presented. The patient, ready for discharge, insists on returning home, yet she is bedbound and lacks adequate social support and financial resources to manage safely. The medical team, troubled by this situation, requests an ethics consultation. The article discusses several issues related to the difficult ethical problem posed by this case, including a brief historical review of the patient's role in decision making, current thinking about patients' rights vis-à-vis patients' well-being, assessing patients' capacity to make sound decisions, consideration of physician values, and, finally, responding to patients' refusal of care.
Comment in
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Refusal of care by patients.JAMA. 2006 Dec 27;296(24):2921-2; author reply 2923. doi: 10.1001/jama.296.24.2921-b. JAMA. 2006. PMID: 17190886 No abstract available.
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Refusal of care by patients.JAMA. 2006 Dec 27;296(24):2921; author reply 2923. doi: 10.1001/jama.296.24.2921-a. JAMA. 2006. PMID: 17190887 No abstract available.
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Refusal of care by patients.JAMA. 2006 Dec 27;296(24):2922-3; author reply 2923. doi: 10.1001/jama.296.24.2922-b. JAMA. 2006. PMID: 17190888 No abstract available.
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Refusal of care by patients.JAMA. 2006 Dec 27;296(24):2922; author reply 2923. doi: 10.1001/jama.296.24.2922-a. JAMA. 2006. PMID: 17190889 No abstract available.
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