posted on 2019-07-19, 15:12authored byAlexis Paton
In this article I discuss the little examined relationship between time and patient autonomy. Using the findings from a study on the experience of premenopausal cancer patients making fertility preservation decisions during their treatment, I focus on how the patients in the study understood time, and how this understanding interacted with and influenced their decision-making. I then analyse in more depth the importance of time in patient decision-making, and the relationship of time to concepts of patient autonomy and decision-making in the field of bioethics more generally. Focusing on the relational conception of autonomy, I conclude that time is an integral part of patient autonomy which warrants further research, such that it can be better integrated into concepts of patient autonomy, and the policy and guidelines that they inform and influence.
Funding
I would like to acknowledge the support of the Susan Channon Breast Cancer Trust, the Policy, Ethics and Life Sciences Research Centre at Newcastle University, and the Sociology Applied to Healthcare Improvement Research Centre at the University of Leicester. I would also like to thank Professors Erica Haimes and Jackie Leach Scully of Newcastle University and Angus Dawson of the University of Sydney for their comments and support.
History
Citation
Monash Bioethics Review, 2018, 36 (1-4), pp. 68-85
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
Monash Bioethics Review
Publisher
Springer (part of Springer Nature) for Centre for Human Bioethics