Planning for the future: a comparative study of advance directives in Scotland, England and the Netherlands
dc.contributor.author
Anderson, Susan Jean
en
dc.date.accessioned
2018-03-29T12:21:22Z
dc.date.available
2018-03-29T12:21:22Z
dc.date.issued
2006
dc.description.abstract
en
dc.description.abstract
This thesis comprises three comparative case studies of advance directives under
existing legislative arrangements in the Netherlands, Scotland and England. In the
Netherlands, an Act of Parliament gives statutory backing to advance directives. In
Scotland, the principles of the Adults with Incapacity (Scotland) Act 2000 instructs
persons who take any intervention under the Act to have regard to a person's
previously expressed wishes. Whereas, in England, no current statute governs
medical decision-making and practitioners look to the common law for legal
guidance. The research seeks to elucidate attitudes to advance directives within the
medical and legal professions in each country and to determine how much impact (if
any) they have on treatment decision-making for incapacitated persons. It focuses on
the process of medical decision-making for patients with and without capacity, and
the ways in which medical and legal professionals assess the adequacy of existing
arrangements. The primary goals of the thesis are to understand whether, and if so
how, advance directives contribute to patient autonomy, the extent to which legal
regulation controls medical decision-making, and the effects of advance directives on
the balance of power between doctors and patients. Two models of decision-making
('substituted judgement' and 'best interests') and how doctors use them to make
decisions for persons without capacity are considered.
en
dc.description.abstract
Arguments in favour of advance directives are usually based on the principle of
respect for individual autonomy, and the belief that anticipatory decision-making
provides a mechanism for preserving patients' autonomy when they are no longer
capable of expressing their own preferences. The idea of using anticipatory decision¬
making as a method of extending individual autonomy into the future has been
welcomed by the majority of medical and legal professionals. However, a significant
minority express serious doubts about the efficacy of advance directives in
preserving the autonomy of the patient, especially when this conflicts with the
doctor's professional autonomy and the exercise of the doctor's professional power.
They may erode the ultimate decision-making power ofthe doctor and exacerbate the
conflict between individual and professional autonomy. Professional autonomy stems
not only from the doctors' knowledge and expertise but also from their position as
gatekeepers for goods and services; it is protected by the medical profession's right
to self-regulation which enables doctors to define both the needs of patients and how
these needs should be met.
en
dc.description.abstract
The study uses a socio-legal approach based on fieldwork in the Netherlands,
Scotland and England to study this important issue in medical law. Qualitative
interviews were conducted with 10 lawyers and 10 doctors in each country and
interview data were analysed using NVIVO. The data were used to study advance
directives in relation to medical decision-making, individual and professional
autonomy and the balance of power between doctor and patient. The main findings
are that, in all three countries, advance directives can be significant in protecting
patient autonomy and can be used to strengthen the patient's substituted judgement.
Statutory regulation of advance directives (in the Netherlands) does not appear to
protect patients' autonomy any more than the common law (in Scotland and
England); in fact the common law seems to be marginally better at ensuring
incapacitated patients' rights to their own choices. Differences in legal regulation of
advance directives in each country have made little difference to the inequality of
power between doctor and patient but legislation is being used to initiate a reduction
of that inequality in the Netherlands, where statutory regulation can strengthen the
patient's substituted judgement and emphasise or enhance decisions made by a
patient's representative. Power in both England and in Scotland is still heavily
weighted on the side of the physician but, in England, advance directives can help
relationships between doctor and patient where the act of writing an advance
directive encourages patients to open a dialogue with their doctors and promote
discussion of future treatment preferences. In Scotland, however, there has been little
change in the doctor-patient relationship - it is still believed that 'doctor knows best'
and prevailing opinion suggests that advance directives are not be legally binding on
doctors.
en
dc.description.abstract
The thesis makes a significant contribution to understanding the operation of advance
directives and their impact on medical decision-making. By investigating medical
decision making in three different jurisdictions, it shows that a patient's personal
autonomy is tolerated rather than celebrated by those in possession of professional
autonomy and power, regardless of the nature of the legal rules involved.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/29452
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.ispartof
Annexe Thesis Digitisation Project 2018 Block 17
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dc.relation.isreferencedby
Already catalogued
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dc.title
Planning for the future: a comparative study of advance directives in Scotland, England and the Netherlands
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
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