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Health care in a multicultural Canada: the ethics of informed consent and the duty to warn of hereditary risk

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dc.contributor.author Dheri, Poonam
dc.date.accessioned 2016-08-24T14:37:12Z
dc.date.available 2016-08-24T14:37:12Z
dc.date.copyright 2016 en_US
dc.date.issued 2016-08-24
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7466
dc.description.abstract Different people can have different cultural interpretations of the person—atomic versus embedded—and these may affect health care decision-making. This study examines both the ethics of variations in personhood as well as their implications for the doctrine of informed consent and the duty to warn of genetic disease risk. It argues that variations in personhood are consistent with the ethics of the Principle of Autonomy and the Canadian stand on informed consent, though autonomy and consent play out differently in practice on the two models. Also as a result of different interpretations of the person, the duty to warn of hereditary risk is found to be relevant to the atomic conception but unnecessary among embedded individuals. en_US
dc.language English eng
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.rights Available to the World Wide Web en_US
dc.subject personhood, autonomy, medical decision-making, informed consent, duty to warn, genetics en_US
dc.title Health care in a multicultural Canada: the ethics of informed consent and the duty to warn of hereditary risk en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US
dc.contributor.supervisor Kluge, Eike-Henner W.
dc.contributor.supervisor Arbour, Laura
dc.degree.department Interdisciplinary Graduate Program en_US
dc.degree.level Master of Science M.Sc. en_US
dc.description.scholarlevel Graduate en_US
dc.description.proquestcode 0422 en_US
dc.description.proquestcode 0566 en_US
dc.description.proquestcode 0326 en_US


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