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Main description:
If a competent adult refuses medical treatment, physicians and public officials must respect her decision. Coercive medical paternalism is a clear violation of the doctrine of informed consent, which protects patients' rights to make medical decisions even if a patient's choice endangers her health. The same reasons for rejecting medical paternalism in the doctor's office are also reasons to reject medical paternalism at the pharmacy, yet coercive medical paternalism
persists in the form of premarket approval policies and prescription requirements for pharmaceuticals.
In Pharmaceutical Freedom Jessica Flanigan defends patients' rights of self-medication. Flanigan argues that public officials should certify drugs instead of enforcing prohibitive pharmaceutical policies that disrespect people's rights to make intimate medical decisions and prevent patients from accessing potentially beneficial new therapies. This argument has revisionary implications for important and timely debates about medical paternalism, recreational drug legalization, human
enhancement, prescription drug prices, physician assisted suicide, and pharmaceutical marketing. The need for reform is especially urgent as medical treatment becomes increasingly personalized and patients advocate for the right to try. The doctrine of informed consent revolutionized medicine in the twentieth
century by empowering patients to make treatment decisions. Rights of self-medication are the next step.
Contents:
Introduction
Chapter 1: A Defense of Self-Medication
Chapter 2 Paternalism and Public Health
Chapter 3 Rethinking Prescription Requirements
Chapter 4 Responsibility and Regulation
Chapter 5 The Politics of Self Medication
Chapter 6 The Business of Medicine
Chapter 7 Medical Autonomy and Modern Healthcare
Conclusion
References
PRODUCT DETAILS
Publisher: Oxford University Press (Oxford University Press Inc)
Publication date: September, 2017
Pages: 272
Dimensions: 156.00 x 242.00 x 23.00
Weight: 515g
Availability: Available
Subcategories: Ethics