Hmm...
I still think paternalistic docs are less likely to gather relevant information.
That's because you have formed a picture of paternalism which includes negative characteristics that aren't necessarily part of the philosophy, but now represent its use as a derogative term. I'm asking people to take a step back and consider the philosophy. If that's not possible, then I have suggested that one could substitute "beneficence", since it doesn't seem to have the same baggage. Remember that under most circumstances, the goals and results of patient autonomy and beneficence will be identical.
Using the
CMA medical ethics as a guide, the only point where you can distinguish the two is with the following:
21. Provide your patients with the information they need to make informed decisions about their medical care...
The rest of them are the same, regardless of whether or not the patient is making a choice between numerous options or a doctor is recommending one or a few as the best options.
22. Make every reasonable effort to communicate with your patients in such a way that information exchanged is understood.
23. Recommend only those diagnostic and therapeutic services that you consider to be beneficial to your patient or to others. If a service is recommended for the benefit of others, as for example in matters of public health, inform your patient of this fact and proceed only with explicit
informed consent or where required by law.
24. Respect the right of a competent patient to accept or reject any medical care recommended.
And actually, if you consider the question under consideration to be "I accept or reject the medical care recommended", then the informed consent referred to in #21 also fits with both beneficence and patient autonomy.
If the doc does gather the relevant information, and communicates the rationale behind the treatment choice to the patient and the patient agrees, then it can't be paternalistic. That's just "patient centered care" coming from a very competent physician.
Yet that is a description of the model of care under paternalism.
While I guess it's possible that a doc (in a non-emergent, PCP setting) could gather all the relevant info and not have an open line of communication with the patient about the prescribed treatment, it's difficult to imagine.
Paternalism doesn't preclude communication.
A doctor that communicates with their patient isn't paternalistic-seeming from the patient's point of view.
Exactly! Paternalism is synonymous with arrogance and non-communication, and the examples of why paternalism in medicine is bad are examples of those behaviours.
My interest is not in whether arrogant physicians or those who communicate poorly are preferable (of course they're not). My interest is in the duty of the physician to provide informed consent and which model best represents that ideal.
Linda