The aim of shared decision-making (SDM) is to provide information to patients in order to enable them to decide autonomously and freely about treatment together with the doctor, without interference, force or coercion by others. Relatives may be considered as hindering or impeding a patient's own decision. Qualitative-empirical research into lived experience of SDM of patients with cancer, however, problematises the patient's autonomy when facing terminal illness and the need to make decisions regarding treatment. Confronted with this difficulty, this contribution tries to think through patients' dependency of others, and make their autonomy more relational, drawing on care-ethical critics of a one-sided view of autonomy and on Ricoeur's view of the fundamentally intersubjective, relational self. We aim to conceptualise relatives not as a third party next to the doctor and the patient, but as co-constituents of the patient's identity and as such present in the decision-making process from the outset. What is more, partners and the family may be of inestimable help in retrieving the patient's identity in line with the past, present and possible future.
机构:
Flinders Univ S Australia, Coll Nursing & Hlth Sci, Sturt Rd,GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia
Univ Adelaide, Ctr Heart Rhythm Disorders, North Terrace, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia
Royal Adelaide Hosp, Dept Cardiol, Port Rd, Adelaide, SA 5000, AustraliaFlinders Univ S Australia, Coll Nursing & Hlth Sci, Sturt Rd,GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia
Hendriks, Jeroen M.
Lee, Geraldine
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Kings Coll London, Florence Nightingale Fac Nursing Midwifery & Pall, 57 Waterloo Rd, London SE1 8WA, EnglandFlinders Univ S Australia, Coll Nursing & Hlth Sci, Sturt Rd,GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia