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pubmed-article:10130087pubmed:abstractTextTraditionally, applying the principle that physicians do not provide treatments when the interventions at their disposal do not produce medical benefits has been relatively straight-forward. However, with the growing importance of patient autonomy and informed consent in treatment decisions, ethicists must now balance this principle with the principle of patient self-determination. A patient's right to choose or refuse treatment is limited by the physician's right (and duty) to practice medicine responsibly. Bizarre or destructive choices made by a patient are not sacrosanct simply because the patient made them. In some cases, physicians may choose not to act on patient decisions that appear to be unreasonably destructive. Physicians also have a right to refuse to provide futile treatments (i.e., interventions that might be physiologically effective in some sense but cannot benefit a patient). Patients themselves have a right to provide input into what would constitute a "benefit" for them, but physicians should be able to decide when a particular treatment is futile based on their knowledge of the treatment's effects and its likely impact on a patient's quality of life. Ethical rules covering futility can be developed based on socially sanctioned standards of rationality and traditional physician-based values. Clarifying the concept of futility and establishing defensible ethical policies covering futility are important steps toward eliminating unhelpful, medically inappropriate practices.lld:pubmed
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pubmed-article:10130087pubmed:authorpubmed-author:CoulehanJ LJLlld:pubmed
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pubmed-article:10130087pubmed:articleTitleThe concept of futility. Patients do not have a right to demand medically useless treatment. Counterpoint.lld:pubmed
pubmed-article:10130087pubmed:affiliationEdinboro University of Pennsylvania.lld:pubmed
pubmed-article:10130087pubmed:publicationTypeJournal Articlelld:pubmed
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