Should a School Honor a Student's DNR Order? a Physician/ethicist Responds: A Student's Rights Are Not So Simple
Creator
Youngner, Stuart J.
Bibliographic Citation
Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal. 1992 Mar; 2(1): 13-18.
Abstract
...S.A. has a right to refuse treatment, but the school has a responsibility to others as well as S.A. By insisting on activating 911, the school risks violating her rights. But by agreeing to a rigid demand not to call 911, the school risks harming S.A., her schoolmates, and teachers. S.A. could be harmed in two ways: by having to endure a prolonged and painful death or by not being treated for an acute, reversible event that further compromises her life without ending it. Her fellow schoolmates and teachers could be harmed by being put in a position to exercise judgments and accept responsibilities for which they are neither professionally nor emotionally equipped....
Permanent Link
Find in a Library.http://hdl.handle.net/10822/736018
Date
1992-03Subject
Adolescents; Advance Directives; Allowing to Die; Alternatives; Death; Decision Making; Directive Adherence; Emergency Care; Ethics; Females; Institutional Ethics; Institutional Policies; Life; Minors; Patient Care; Resuscitation; Resuscitation Orders; Right to Die; Rights; Risks and Benefits; Responsibilities; Schools; Students; Treatment Refusal;
Collections
Metadata
Show full item recordRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Should a School Honor a Student's DNR Order? a Physician/ethicist Responds: A Student's Rights Are Not So Simple
Youngner, Stuart J. (1992-03)...S.A. has a right to refuse treatment, but the school has a responsibility to others as well as S.A. By insisting on activating 911, the school risks violating her rights. But by agreeing to a rigid demand not to call ...