Title of article
The ethics of discharge planning for older adults: An ethnographic analysis
Author/Authors
Ann E. P. Dill، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages
11
From page
1289
To page
1299
Abstract
This paper uses ethnographic data to examine ethical dilemmas in discharging elderly persons from the hospital. The focus is on two elements significantly influencing that process, the patientʹs decisional capacity and the involvement of family members in decision-making. Within the field of bioethics these issues have been discussed in terms of factors compromising the autonomy of the patient and the interdependency of family members. An ethnographic analysis demonstrates how several assumptions in bioethical approaches to these issues are problematic. First, bioethical discussions generally neglect social and structural factors that condition discharge decision-making. The rationality and mental capability of the individuals making decisions are presumed to exist independently of those personsʹ social contexts; they are also assumed to be concrete properties amenable to objective assessment. Bioethical models further assume that ‘the family’ is an identifiable ontological unit that exists independently of the setting in which decisions are made and that interdependency is a concrete attribute of familial relations. In contrast, this study shows how discharge planning is an event produced by the interplay among diverse interests. The structure of the discharge plannerʹs role and processes of collective decision-making shape how medical staff perceive and define patientsʹ decisional capacity and the involvement of families. This points to unintentional and unrecognized ways in which the patientʹs choices and control over decisions can be restricted. The analysis supports attempts to develop bioethical models based on socially grounded principles recognizing the importance of both autonomy and interdependence in long term care decisions.
Keywords
hospital discharge planning , Ethnography , ELDERLY , bioethics
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
1995
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
598778
Link To Document