The Intensive-care Physician in the Face of Patient Autonomy: An Approach Based on Several Clinical Cases

Authors

  • Alejandra Juliarena Author Hospital Universitario Austral Pilar
  • Sebastián Cosenza Author
  • Pablo Pratresi Author
  • Rafael Pineda Author

Keywords:

Personal Autonomy, Informed Consent, Physician-Patient Relations, Euthanasia, Assisted Suicide, Refusal to Treat. (Source, Decs, Bireme).

Abstract

Three clinical cases are introduced and analyzed in this article to clarifying the scope and limits of the principle of patient autonomy and the physician's responsibility when it comes to making therapeutic decisions regarding patients who are involved in intensive therapy. The conclusion is that informed consent does not relieve the physician of the obligation to discern what is best in each case for each patient.   The medical team must respect the patient’s autonomy, provided the patient’s decision is not unethical.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Sebastián Cosenza

Hospital Universitario Austral Pilar

Pablo Pratresi

Hospital Universitario Austral Pilar

Rafael Pineda

Hospital Universitario Austral Pilar

Published

2012-07-13

How to Cite

Juliarena, A., Cosenza, S., Pratresi, P., & Pineda, R. (2012). The Intensive-care Physician in the Face of Patient Autonomy: An Approach Based on Several Clinical Cases. Persona Y Bioética, 16(1), 62–66. Retrieved from https://personaybioetica.unisabana.edu.co/index.php/personaybioetica/article/view/2390

Issue

Section

Case report