The fetus, the "potential child," and the ethical obligations of obstetricians.

Obstet Gynecol

Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Maimonides Medical Center, SUNY Downstate, New York New York; the Program in Biomedical Ethics, Center for Biomedical Ethics and Humanities, School of Medicine, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia; and the Center for Bioethics and the School of Nursing, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Published: May 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • Pregnant women have the established right to refuse medical interventions, which is crucial for respecting their autonomy, but fetal considerations still play a role in ethical discussions.
  • The debate centers on how much a woman's right to demand interventions should take precedence, particularly when the fetus is viewed as a "potential child" based on her decision to continue the pregnancy.
  • While the interests of the fetus shouldn't override a woman's right to reject care, they may influence her affirmative autonomy and a physician's decisions regarding treatment options.

Article Abstract

The right of pregnant women to refuse obstetric interventions is an established tenet of obstetric ethics. However, that does not mean that fetal considerations are inconsequential. Although respect for negative autonomy is largely a settled issue, what is less clear is the degree to which a pregnant woman's affirmative autonomy (the right to demand) should be controlling. We discuss the ethical basis for deciding when a pregnant woman's affirmative autonomy should be decisive. We focus on the ethical consequences when a fetus is considered a "potential child" because of a woman's decision to continue a pregnancy. Her intention determines the relevance and nature of the interests of the future child. Although fetal interests may temporally approach those of a born child, they are, in all cases, still circumscribed by the de facto circumstance of the potential child, ie, the child cannot be treated without treating the mother. That treatment would implicate the pregnant woman's right to bodily integrity. This right is so fundamental to our conception of autonomy that its trespass should give serious pause to all who respect basic human dignity. Accordingly, the future interests of a child should not constrain a pregnant woman's right of negative autonomy (the right to refuse any intervention intended for the putative benefit of the fetus or herself). However, the interests of the potential child may factor into considerations of affirmative autonomy and, in parallel, on a physician's right to refuse a particular intervention or plan of care.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/AOG.0000000000000225DOI Listing

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