Article info
Research Article
Should informed consent be based on rational beliefs?
Citation
Should informed consent be based on rational beliefs?
Publication history
- First published October 1, 1997.
Online issue publication
October 01, 1997
Request permissions
If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.
Other content recommended for you
- Jehovah's Witnesses and autonomy: honouring the refusal of blood transfusions
- The impossibility of informed consent?
- Juggling law, ethics, and intuition: practical answers to awkward questions
- The ethics of policy writing: how should hospitals deal with moral disagreement about controversial medical practices?
- Disfigured anatomies and imperfect analogies: body integrity identity disorder and the supposed right to self-demanded amputation of healthy body parts
- Applying the four principles
- Jehovah’s Witnesses in the emergency department: what are their rights?
- Assessing the ethical weight of cultural, religious and spiritual claims in the clinical context
- Why some Jehovah's Witnesses accept blood and conscientiously reject official Watchtower Society blood policy
- Methods and principles in biomedical ethics