Explorations of the Relationship Between the right to Make Decisions and Moral Responsibility in Healthcare
Abstract
People intuitively think that there is a strong connection between having a
right to make decisions and to be morally responsible for those decisions.
This thesis explores the relationship between these notions in the context of
healthcare. The exploration particularly focuses on what I call fringe
decisional agents, e.g. adolescents and people who suffer from mental
disorder, who have uncertain decision-making competence and exist at the
intersection of different institutions.
I argue that even though the two notions are strongly connected they can
come apart. First, even though both notions are concerned with the moral
status of a person there is a potential conflict between the appropriate
responses to a person who has the right to decide and someone who is
morally responsible. Second, even if conditions for having the right to decide
and being morally responsible are very similar they can come apart. Moral
responsibility requires that a person exercises a certain degree of control over
their actions, a condition that has no clear equivalent for the right to decide.
Furthermore, even though both have cognitive conditions, the condition for
having the right to decide is directed towards information regarding oneself,
whereas the condition for moral responsibility is primarily directed towards
information about other people. Finally, if an agent is the concern of different
institutions, these might have different conditions for assigning the relevant
status and may furthermore do so at different times.
Parts of work
I. Hartvigsson, T., Munthe, C., & Forsander, G. (2018). Error-Trawling and Fringe Decision Competence: Ethical Hazards in Monitoring and Address Patient Decision Capacity in Clinical Practice. Clinical Ethics, 13(3), 126-136. https://doi.org/10.1177/1477750917749955 II. Munthe, C., El-Alti, L., Hartvigsson, T., & Nijsingh, N. (2018).
Disputing with Patients in Person-Centered Care: Ethical Aspects in Standard Care, Pediatrics, Psychiatry, and Public Health. Journal of Argumentation in Context, 7(2), 231-244 https://doi.org/10.1075/jaic.18022.mun III. Hartvigsson, T. and Munthe, C. (manuscript) Responsibilities in Change: Modelling Parental Authority and Children's
Autonomy IV. Hartvigsson, T. (submitted) Between Punishment and Care: Autonomous Offenders Who Commit Crimes Under the Influence of Mental Disorder.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Humanistiska fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Humanities
Institution
Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science ; Institutionen för filosofi, lingvistik och vetenskapsteori
Disputation
December 11, 2020, at 1:15 p.m., in J222, Humanisten, Renströmsgatan 6, Gothenburg.
Date of defence
2020-12-11
thomas.hartvigsson@gu.se
Date
2020-11-18Author
Hartvigsson, Thomas
Keywords
autonomy
moral responsibility
informed consent
adolescence
family
mental disorder
ethics
criminal responsibility
bioethics
medical ethics
healthcare
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7963-042-3
978-91-7963-043-0
Series/Report no.
0283-2380
37
Language
eng