Article Text
Abstract
Recent developments in professional healthcare pose moral problems that standard bioethics cannot even identify as problems, but that are fully visible when redefined as problems in the ethics of families. Here, we add to the growing body of work that began in the 1990s by demonstrating the need for a distinctive ethics of families. First, we discuss what ‘family’ means and why families can matter so deeply to the lives of those within them. Then, we briefly sketch how, according to an ethics of families, responsibilities must be negotiated against the backdrop of family relationships, treatment decisions must be made in the light of these negotiated responsibilities and justice must be served, both between families and society more generally and within families themselves.
- Ethics
- Family
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Read the full text or download the PDF:
Other content recommended for you
- What factors have influenced quality of life in people with dementia and their family carers during the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative study
- Experiencing the care of a family member with Crohn’s disease: a qualitative study
- Namaste care in the home setting: developing initial realist explanatory theories and uncovering unintended outcomes
- How family carers engage with technical health procedures in the home: a grounded theory study
- Healthcare organisation and delivery for people with dementia and comorbidity: a qualitative study exploring the views of patients, carers and professionals
- Navigating parental requests: considering the relational potential standard in paediatric end-of-life care in the paediatric intensive care unit
- Authoritarian versus responsive communitarian bioethics
- Experiences of psychotropic medication use and decision-making for adults with intellectual disability: a multistakeholder qualitative study in the UK
- Psychosocial impact on frontline health and social care professionals in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic: a qualitative interview study
- Exploring how people with dementia can be best supported to manage long-term conditions: a qualitative study of stakeholder perspectives