1st Edition

Autonomy, Consent and the Law

By Sheila A.M. McLean Copyright 2010
256 Pages
by Routledge

246 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

Autonomy is often said to be the dominant ethical principle in modern bioethics, and it is also important in law. Respect for autonomy is said to underpin the law of consent, which is theoretically designed to protect the right of patients to make decisions based on their own values and for their own reasons. The notion that consent underpins beneficent and lawful medical intervention is deeply... Read more

1. Autonomy Introduced  2. Autonomy in Law  3. Consent and the Law  4. Autonomy and Pregnancy  5. Autonomy at the End of Life  6. Autonomy and Transplantation  7. Autonomy and Genetics  8. Autonomy and Consent Revisited

Biography

Sheila A. M. McLean is International Bar Association Professor of Law Ethics in Medicine, Director of the Institute of Law Ethics in Medicine and of the Centre for Applied Ethics and Legal Philosophy at the University of Glasgow.

'Through a detailed and wide-ranging theoretical, legal, and social analysis, McLean provides a thoughtful and powerful response to those who would argue that English and Scottish medical and healthcare laws have the promotion of patient autonomy at their heart.'

John Coggon, Research Fellow on the Wellcome project, The Human Body- Its Scope, Limits and Future, Institute for Science, Ethics, and Innovation, School of Law, University of Manchester