Defining and refining trauma-informed ethics consultation

Article

LANPHIER, Elizabeth | ANANI, Uchenna E.

This article responds to Autumn Fiester's "TIEC, Trauma Capacity, and the Moral Priority of Surrogate Decision Makers in Futility Disputes," in which Fiester argues for a vision of trauma-informed ethics consultation that systematically prioritizes the preferences of surrogate decision makers in cases of disagreement between surrogates and clinical teams over continued life-sustaining therapies for severely neurologically impaired patients. We identify three issues arising from Fiester's article that allow us to clarify our account of trauma-informed ethics consultation on which she builds and that illustrate the need for further research on trauma-informed ethics consultation in both theory and practice. The first issue responds to her charge that ours was an overly "modest" proposal. The second issue is to suggest closer attention to distinctions between ethics consultation process, methods, and content that we argue would enhance Fiester's account. The third is to better evaluate the appropriate role of "ethically acceptable options" in trauma-informed ethics consultation. In conclusion, we raise several global points regarding the further development of trauma-informed ethics consultation and conceptualizations of trauma-informed care relevant to it.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/733391

Voir la revue «The journal of clinical ethics, 36»

Autres numéros de la revue «The journal of clinical ethics»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Defining and refining trauma-informed ethics ...

Article indépendant | LANPHIER, Elizabeth | The journal of clinical ethics | n°1 | vol.36

This article responds to Autumn Fiester's "TIEC, Trauma Capacity, and the Moral Priority of Surrogate Decision Makers in Futility Disputes," in which Fiester argues for a vision of trauma-informed ethics consultation that systemat...

De la même série

TIEC, trauma capacity, and the moral priority...

Article | FIESTER, Autumn | The journal of clinical ethics | n°1 | vol.36

In the past 15 years, trauma-informed care (TIC) has evolved as a new paradigm in healthcare that recognizes the impact of past traumas on patients' and families' healthcare experience while seeking to avoid inducing new trauma du...

Defining and refining trauma-informed ethics ...

Article | LANPHIER, Elizabeth | The journal of clinical ethics | n°1 | vol.36

This article responds to Autumn Fiester's "TIEC, Trauma Capacity, and the Moral Priority of Surrogate Decision Makers in Futility Disputes," in which Fiester argues for a vision of trauma-informed ethics consultation that systemat...

A deeper look at ethics consultation

Article | MORREIM, Haavi | The journal of clinical ethics | n°1 | vol.36

Autumn Fiester suggests that trauma-informed ethics consultation (TIEC) should focus on surrogate decision makers (SDMs) in preference over patients when (a) the patient is comatose or neurologically devastated, and hence beyond t...

When patients and providers feel helpless : a...

Article | HOWE, Edmund G. | The journal of clinical ethics | n°3 | vol.35

Whether providers should ever help patients die when they profoundly suffer from seemingly irreversible psychiatric illness is globally controversial. For example, in 2016, the American Psychiatric Association held that psychiatri...

Palliative care for refractory depressive sym...

Article | SAMMOUR, Yasser | The journal of clinical ethics | n°3 | vol.35

Psychiatric treatment options, such as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), can be lifesaving for individuals suffering from severe mental illness. For individuals who are unable to make or communicate their own medical decisions, thi...

Chargement des enrichissements...