After Autonomy
34 Pages Posted: 24 May 2017
Date Written: 2006
Abstract
Bioethics has a core agenda of some coherence. How, then, if we evaluate bioethics by assessing not the merits of the principle it professes but the success of the policies it promotes? What are the fruits of the program to equip patients to make the health-care decisions that affect them? It is through this question that I propose that we re-examine bioethics. The best way to refresh bioethics is not to grope for a new organizing principle, but rather to assess the content and consequences of bioethics' agenda. If that agenda is succeeding, bioethics need not be reconceived. If that agenda has largely failed, we will have added reason to reconceive bioethics, have evidence about the sources of bioethics' weaknesses, and have hints about directions for a new bioethics. If a new bioethics is necessary. And possible.
Keywords: Bioethics, Informed Consent, Living Wills, Consumer-Directed Health Care, Mandatory Disclosure
JEL Classification: K00, K32
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation