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Morten Klemme Nielsen

Morten Klemme Nielsen

Lecturer

Morten Klemme Nielsen

"What the patient would have decided": A fundamental problem with the substituted judgment standard.

Author

  • Linus Broström
  • Mats Johansson
  • Morten Klemme Nielsen

Summary, in English

Decision making for incompetent patients is a much-discussed topic in bioethics. According to one influential decision making standard, the substituted judgment standard, the decision that ought to be made for the incompetent patient is the decision the patient would have made, had he or she been competent. Although the merits of this standard have been extensively debated, some important issues have not been sufficiently explored. One fundamental problem is that the substituted judgment standard, as commonly formulated, is indeterminate in content and thus offers the surrogate little or no guidance. What the standard does not specify is just how competent one should imagine the patient to be, and what else one ought to envision about the patient’s hypothetical outlook and the circumstances surrounding his or her decision making. The article discusses this problem of underdetermined decision conditions.

Department/s

  • Medical Ethics
  • School of Social Work

Publishing year

2007

Language

English

Pages

265-278

Publication/Series

Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy

Volume

10

Issue

3

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Springer

Topic

  • Clinical Medicine

Keywords

  • autonomy - decision conditions - hypothetical consent - incompetence - substituted judgment - substituted judgment standard - surrogate decision making

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1572-8633