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1.
Clin Ethics ; 18(1): 7-12, 2023 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37283273

RESUMEN

Introduction: This article is a response to Zagouras, Ellick, and Aulisio who presented a case study justifying the questioning of the capacity and autonomy of a young woman with a physical disability who was pregnant and facing coercive pressure to terminate. Case description: Julia is described as a 26-year-old woman with a neurological disability that requires her to receive assistance with activities of daily living. She was described as living with her parents who provided her with personal care assistance. Julia became pregnant and her parents wished her to terminate because they did not want to care for her child in addition to her. In fact, Julia's parents threatened her with institutionalization if she did not elect to terminate the pregnancy. Her health care team questioned her decision-making capacity based on her alleged "mental age" and experiences of being sheltered and excluded. The health care team used directive tactics to convince Julia to terminate the pregnancy, which describe as both an ethical and feminist intervention. Discussion: The current authors take issue with the case analysis provided by and argue that they neglected to account for numerous instances of systemic ableism that adversely affected Julia, demonstrated prejudicial and judgmental attitudes toward pregnancy and disability, inappropriately questioned her decision-making capacity by infantilizing her, misconstrued the feminist concept of relational autonomy, and colluded with coercive interference from family members. This is a classic example of discriminatory and culturally incompetent reproductive health care for a disabled woman.

2.
Am J Bioeth ; 23(1): 1-3, 2023 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36595000
3.
Surgery ; 171(4): 1121-1122, 2022 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34763848
4.
Theor Med Bioeth ; 41(5-6): 247-271, 2020 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33025313

RESUMEN

In this paper, I argue that disabled people have a right to assistive technology (AT), but this right cannot be grounded simply in a broader right to health care or in a more comprehensive view like the capabilities approach to justice. Both of these options are plagued by issues that I refer to as the problem of constriction, where the theory does not justify enough of the AT that disabled people should have access to, and the problem of overextension, where the theory cannot adequately identify an upper limit on the AT that people have a right to. As an alternative to these justificatory frameworks, I argue that disabled people are owed access to AT at the expense of nondisabled people as a matter of compensatory justice. That is, I defend the position that disabled people are owed AT as part of due compensation for the harms they experience from being disadvantaged by society's dominant cooperative scheme and the violation of their right to equality of opportunity that such disadvantage entails. I also propose a method for identifying an upper limit to what this right to AT requires. In this way, I argue that compensatory justice avoids both the problem of constriction and the problem of overextension.


Asunto(s)
Derechos Humanos/tendencias , Dispositivos de Autoayuda/ética , Justicia Social/tendencias , Personas con Discapacidad , Humanos , Justicia Social/ética
5.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 50 Suppl 1: S30-S36, 2020 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32597527

RESUMEN

It is sometimes argued that medical professionals should protect a future child's rights by prohibiting disabled parents from using technology to deliberately have a disabled child because disability is taken as an inevitable, severe threat to a child's otherwise "open" future. I will first argue that the open future that allegedly protects a child's future autonomy is precluded by the very conditions needed to develop that future autonomy. Any child's future will be narrowed as they are socialized in a way that gives them the capacity for autonomous choice. However, oppressive master narratives can diminish a future child's autonomy by distorting their narrative identity and constricting their agency. In fact, the open future argument does just this by advancing one of the most damaging master narratives about disability: that disability inevitably and severely restricts a person's autonomy and closes their future.


Asunto(s)
Niños con Discapacidad/psicología , Autonomía Personal , Niño , Conducta de Elección , Humanos , Padres
6.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 50(3): 28-32, 2020 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32596899

RESUMEN

In this essay, we suggest practical ways to shift the framing of crisis standards of care toward disability justice. We elaborate on the vision statement provided in the 2010 Institute of Medicine (National Academy of Medicine) "Summary of Guidance for Establishing Crisis Standards of Care for Use in Disaster Situations," which emphasizes fairness; equitable processes; community and provider engagement, education, and communication; and the rule of law. We argue that interpreting these elements through disability justice entails a commitment to both distributive and recognitive justice. The disability rights movement's demand "Nothing about us, without us" requires substantive inclusion of disabled people in decision-making related to their interests, including in crisis planning before, during, and after a pandemic like Covid-19.


Asunto(s)
Infecciones por Coronavirus/epidemiología , Personas con Discapacidad , Equidad en Salud/ética , Neumonía Viral/epidemiología , Justicia Social/ética , Nivel de Atención/ética , Betacoronavirus , COVID-19 , Comunicación , Equidad en Salud/legislación & jurisprudencia , Humanos , Pandemias , SARS-CoV-2 , Justicia Social/legislación & jurisprudencia , Nivel de Atención/legislación & jurisprudencia
7.
Sci Eng Ethics ; 25(4): 1125-1145, 2019 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29717469

RESUMEN

Disability activists have sometimes claimed their disability has actually increased their well-being. Some even say they would reject a cure to keep these gains. Yet, these same activists often simultaneously propose improvements to the quality and accessibility of assistive technology. However, for any argument favoring assistive over curative technology (or vice versa) to work, there must be a coherent distinction between the two. This line is already vague and will become even less clear with the emergence of novel technologies. This paper asks and tries to answer the question: what is it about the paradigmatic examples of curative and assistive technologies that make them paradigmatic and how can these defining features help us clarify the hard cases? This analysis will begin with an argument that, while the common views of this distinction adequately explain the paradigmatic cases, they fail to accurately pick out the relevant features of those technologies that make them paradigmatic and to provide adequate guidance for parsing the hard cases. Instead, it will be claimed that these categories of curative or assistive technologies are defined by the role the technologies play in establishing a person's relational narrative identity as a member of one of two social groups: disabled people or non-disabled people.


Asunto(s)
Personas con Discapacidad/psicología , Análisis Ético , Autoimagen , Dispositivos de Autoayuda/psicología , Humanos , Identificación Psicológica , Recuperación de la Función , Rol , Identificación Social
8.
Kennedy Inst Ethics J ; 27(2): 151-184, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28736418

RESUMEN

It is widely assumed that disability is typically a bad thing for those who are disabled. Our purpose in this essay is to critique this view and defend a more nuanced picture of the relationship between disability and well-being. We first examine four interpretations of the above view and argue that it is false on each interpretation. We then ask whether disability is thereby a neutral trait. Our view is that most disabilities are neutral in one sense, though we cannot make simple generalizations about disability's relationship to well-being in other important senses. After defending this view, we discuss its practical implications for selective abortion for disability, nondisabled people's interactions with disabled people, and the use of QALYs in health policy.


Asunto(s)
Actitud Frente a la Salud , Personas con Discapacidad/psicología , Calidad de Vida , Bioética , Humanos , Años de Vida Ajustados por Calidad de Vida
9.
Hastings Cent Rep ; 46(3): 22-30, 2016 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27150415

RESUMEN

The deeply entrenched, sometimes heated conflict between the disability movement and the profession of bioethics is well known and well documented. Critiques of prenatal diagnosis and selective abortion are probably the most salient and most sophisticated of disability studies scholars' engagements with bioethics, but there are many other topics over which disability activists and scholars have encountered the field of bioethics in an adversarial way, including health care rationing, growth-attenuation interventions, assisted reproduction technology, and physician-assisted suicide. The tension between the analyses of the disabilities studies scholars and mainstream bioethics is not merely a conflict between two insular political groups, however; it is, rather, also an encounter between those who have experienced disability and those who have not. This paper explores that idea. I maintain that it is a mistake to think of this conflict as arising just from a difference in ideology or political commitments because it represents a much deeper difference-one rooted in variations in how human beings perceive and reason about moral problems. These are what I will refer to as variations of moral psychology. The lived experiences of disability produce variations in moral psychology that are at the heart of the moral conflict between the disability movement and mainstream bioethics. I will illustrate this point by exploring how the disability movement and mainstream bioethics come into conflict when perceiving and analyzing the moral problem of physician-assisted suicide via the lens of the principle of respect for autonomy. To reconcile its contemporary and historical conflict with the disability movement, the field of bioethics must engage with and fully consider the two groups' differences in moral perception and reasoning, not just the explicit moral and political arguments of the disability movement.


Asunto(s)
Bioética , Personas con Discapacidad/psicología , Principios Morales , Autonomía Personal , Aborto Inducido/ética , Discusiones Bioéticas , Disentimientos y Disputas , Asignación de Recursos para la Atención de Salud , Humanos , Filosofía Médica , Diagnóstico Prenatal , Suicidio Asistido/ética
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