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무의미한 치료에 대한 형법적 판단Criminal Considerations on Medical Futility

Other Titles
Criminal Considerations on Medical Futility
Authors
정규원
Issue Date
Oct-2006
Publisher
한양대학교 법학연구소
Keywords
Medical futility; Euthanasia; Duty of doctor to treatment; Stopping the treatment; Medical futility; Euthanasia; Duty of doctor to treatment; Stopping the treatment; 무의미한 치료; 안락사; 의사의 치료의무; 치료중단
Citation
법학논총, v.23, no.2, pp.189 - 204
Indexed
KCI
OTHER
Journal Title
법학논총
Volume
23
Number
2
Start Page
189
End Page
204
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/180844
ISSN
1225-228X
Abstract
Medical Practice can be justified when there are medical indication and the consent of patient. According to the Medical Act Article16 the doctor can't reject the practice when patient requests, if there is no justifiable reason. Most scholars agree that some types of euthanasia can be justifiable. Some argue that the patient voluntarily request euthanasia, there is no treatment method, and the pain is unbearable, the nearess of death, etc. Others argue that the consent to euthanasia is the major requirement. The concept of medical futility is similar to euthanasia, but it is different notion. When the medical treatment is futile is decided based on the medical indication. So the range of medical futility is broader than euthanasia. While doctors have an ethical and legal responsibility to respect an autonomous patient's wish for life-prolonging treatment there is a consensus among the professionals that this imperative should be bounded by the medical indication. The concept of medical futility is premised on an idea that if there is no medical indication, the doctor has no duty to treatment. In other words, when further intervention to prolong the life of a patient becomes futile, physicians have an obligation to shift the intent of care toward comfort and closure. In that case, the doctor is not punished because of the non-treatment or stopping the life-prolonging treatment Even though we can agree the concept of the medical futility, it is necessary to consider the wish of the patient. So the doctor can stop the treatment when there is no medical indication medically futile) and the consent of the patient to stop the life-prolonging treatment. If we agree the two element of medical futility, which is not punished, this concept of medical futility can satisfy the principle of respect to autonomy and principle of justice.
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