Article Text
Abstract
Heuser, Eller and Byrne provide important descriptive ethics data about how physicians counsel women on the clinical management of pregnancies complicated by severe fetal anomalies. The authors present an account of what such counselling ought to be based on, the ethical concept of the fetus as a patient and the professional responsibility model of obstetric ethics. When there is certainty about the diagnosis and either a very high probability of either death as the outcome of the anomaly or survival with severe and irreversible deficit of cognitive developmental capacity as a result of the anomaly diagnosed, the pregnant woman should be offered the alternatives of aggressive and non-aggressive obstetric management and induced abortion before viability. It is also ethically permissible to offer feticide followed by termination of pregnancy after viability in such cases. This ethically justified approach will reduce the variation in the actual practices of specialists in maternal–fetal medicine described by Heuser, Eller and Byrne.
- Severe fetal anomalies
- fetus as a patient
- professional responsibility model of obstetric ethics
- non-aggressive obstetric management
- abortion
- history of health ethics/bioethics
- paediatric ethics
- futility
- ethics in obstetrics and gynaecology
- history of medical ethics
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Linked Articles
- Reproductive ethics
- The concise argument
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- Survey of physicians' approach to severe fetal anomalies
- Dotting the I's and crossing the T's: autonomy and/or beneficence? The ‘fetus as a patient’ in maternal–fetal surgery
- Cursed lamp: the problem of spontaneous abortion
- Abortion and Ectogenesis: Moral Compromise
- The Two tragedies argument
- Does professional orientation predict ethical sensitivities? Attitudes of paediatric and obstetric specialists toward fetuses, pregnant women and pregnancy termination
- Clinical application of fetal genome-wide sequencing during pregnancy: position statement of the Canadian College of Medical Geneticists
- Diagnosis and management of covid-19 in pregnancy
- Multiple pregnancy in a primigravida with uncorrected Pentalogy of Fallot
- An important clinical lesson from a patient infected with HIV with diabetic nephropathy and retinopathy