I just asked a question, Linda, because you seem to be using the word paternalism differently to some other people in the thread and I was trying to clarify what it meant to you. You seem to be using it as a synonym of beneficience, whereas others on the thread (including some medical types) are not. For example Dr Imago said (my italics added):
My question was meant to apply under both uses of the term. Is a father expected to abandon their responsibility to a child at the first signs of misbehaviour?
So if you offer different alternatives, and the patient decides they don't want the alternative that you consider the best and would prefer a different (less good IYO) option, then you will prescribe their preferred option?
Why wouldn't I?
I think this goes back to what I mentioned earlier about the characterization of the patient's behaviour when they refuse. If that characterization is negative, then the model is paternalism. And we expect some sort of punishment or censure for negative behaviour. That was why I switched to talking about beneficence, since it doesn't seem to carry that same expectation.
If so, how on earth is that an "illusion" of the patient having a choice? Please explain it to me, as I am really not understanding you.
The illusion is that the choice is fully informed or that emphasizing patient autonomy over beneficence serves/protects the best interests of the patient. That is the major shift from pre to post-Nuremberg medical ethics. And I think that emphasizing patient autonomy does provide better protection against maleficence, which was perhaps the main impetus at the time. But if the only conflict is between beneficence and patient autonomy, then autonomy can only mean that the patient is free to act against their own interest. Whether or not this is 'best' is more of a socio-political discussion.
I see the emphasis on beneficence as placing a greater responsibility on the physician to make sure the patient isn't floundering - to ensure that any choices made adequately reflect the patient's interests.
Oh and by the way, I presume Ivor was using the word confound with the definitions "To fail to distinguish; mix up".
So did I, but he says that he wasn't.
Linda