问责
生命伦理学
印为红字的
构造(python库)
伊斯兰教
义务
职责
医学伦理学
生活质量(医疗保健)
临床伦理学
质量(理念)
心理学
社会学
法学
医学
政治学
工程伦理学
心理治疗师
认识论
神学
哲学
教育学
工程类
程序设计语言
计算机科学
作者
Aasim I. Padela,Afshan Mohiuddin
标识
DOI:10.1080/15265161.2014.974769
摘要
End-of-life medical decision making presents a major challenge to patients and physicians alike. In order to determine whether it is ethically justifiable to forgo medical treatment in such scenarios, clinical data must be interpreted alongside patient values, as well as in light of the physician's ethical commitments. Though much has been written about this ethical issue from religious perspectives (especially Christian and Jewish), little work has been done from an Islamic point of view. To fill the gap in the literature around Islamic bioethical perspectives on the matter, we derive a theologically rooted rubric for goals of care. We use the Islamic obligation for Muslims to seek medical treatment as the foundation for determining the clinical conditions under which Muslim physicians have a duty to treat. We next link the theological concept of accountability before God (taklīf) to quality-of-life assessment. Using this construct, we suggest that a Muslim physician is not obligated to maintain or continue clinical treatment when patients who were formerly of, or had the potential to be, mukallaf (the term for a person who has taklīf), are now not expected to regain that status by means of continued clinical treatment.
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