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Published in: Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 1/2018

01-03-2018 | Original Research

Law as Clinical Evidence: A New ConstitutiveModel of Medical Education and Decision-Making

Authors: Malcolm Parker, Lindy Willmott, Ben White, Gail Williams, Colleen Cartwright

Published in: Journal of Bioethical Inquiry | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Over several decades, ethics and law have been applied to medical education and practice in a way that reflects the continuation during the twentieth century of the strong distinction between facts and values. We explain the development of applied ethics and applied medical law and report selected results that reflect this applied model from an empirical project examining doctors’ decisions on withdrawing/withholding treatment from patients who lack decision-making capacity. The model is critiqued, and an alternative “constitutive” model is supported on the basis that medicine, medical law, and medical ethics exemplify the inevitable entanglement of facts and values. The model requires that ethics and law be taught across the medical education curriculum and integrated with the basic and clinical sciences and that they be perceived as an integral component of medical evidence and practice. Law, in particular, would rank as equal in normative authority to the relevant clinical scientific “facts” of the case, with graduating doctors having as strong a basic command of each category as the other. The normalization of legal knowledge as part of the clinician’s evidence base to be utilized in practice may provide adequate consolation for clinicians who may initially resent further perceived incursions on their traditional independence and discretion.
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Metadata
Title
Law as Clinical Evidence: A New ConstitutiveModel of Medical Education and Decision-Making
Authors
Malcolm Parker
Lindy Willmott
Ben White
Gail Williams
Colleen Cartwright
Publication date
01-03-2018
Publisher
Springer Singapore
Published in
Journal of Bioethical Inquiry / Issue 1/2018
Print ISSN: 1176-7529
Electronic ISSN: 1872-4353
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11673-017-9836-3

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