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Should we criminalize a deliberate failure to obtain properly informed consent?

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-01-18, 10:17 authored by Clark Hobson, José Miola
This paper takes the form of a polemic and thought experiment. The starting point is that, if medical law’s claims to place autonomy at the heart of the enterprise are to be taken seriously, then autonomy either needs to be considered a recoverable harm, or the most egregious infringements should be subject to the criminal law. This might particularly be the case where a doctor deliberately attempts to modify the patient’s decision by failing to disclose information that they know that the patient would find significant. The article considers medical law’s relationship with autonomy, before applying the criminal law – in the form of the analogous situation of defendants who deliberately fail to disclose HIV+ status to their sexual partners. What we find is a distinct difference in the way that autonomy is seen by medical and criminal law, although both are equally unsatisfactory.

History

Citation

Hobson C, Miola J. Should we criminalize a deliberate failure to obtain properly informed consent? Medical Law International. 2021;21(4):369-392. doi:10.1177/09685332211060265

Author affiliation

Leicester Law School

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Medical Law International

Volume

21

Issue

4

Pagination

369 - 392

Publisher

SAGE Publications

issn

0968-5332

eissn

2047-9441

Acceptance date

2021-10-25

Copyright date

2021

Available date

2021-11-09

Language

en

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