Medical Law and Moral Rights discusses live issues arising in
modern medical practice. Do patients undergoing intolerable
irremediable suffering have a moral right to physician-assisted
suicide? Ought they to have a comparable legal right? Do the moral
duties of a mother to care for and not abuse her child also apply
to her fetus? Ought fetuses to be given legal rights requiring
pregnant women to submit to medical treatment without their
consent? Ought single women, homosexual couples or persons carrying
serious genetic defects to have a legal right to procreate? Ought a
physician to perform an abortion requested for some frivolous
reason? Ought physicians to be permitted to refuse to provide
medically futile treatment demanded by their patients? An
examination of relevant court cases shows how United States law
answers these questions. The author then advocates improvements in
the law to make it respect our moral rights more fully. To justify
his conclusions, he proposes original conceptions of the human
rights to life, procreational autonomy, privacy, equitable
treatment and personal security. Thus, these essays test the
usefulness of the theory of rights explained and defended in An
Approach to Rights and elsewhere.
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