Cookies on this website

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you click 'Accept all cookies' we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies and you won't see this message again. If you click 'Reject all non-essential cookies' only necessary cookies providing core functionality such as security, network management, and accessibility will be enabled. Click 'Find out more' for information on how to change your cookie settings.

Confidentiality in genetic testing poses important ethical challenges to the current primacy of respect for autonomy and patient choice in health care. It also presents a challenge to approaches to decision-making emphasising the ethical importance of the consequences of health care decisions. In this paper a case is described in which respect for confidentiality calls both for disclosure and non-disclosure, and in which respect for patient autonomy and the demand to avoid causing harm each appear to call both for testing without consent, and testing only with consent. This creates problems not only for clinicians, families and patients, but also for those who propose clinical bioethics as a tool for the resolution of such dilemmas. In this paper I propose some practical ways in which ethical issues in clinical genetics and elsewhere, might be addressed. In particular I call for a closer relationship between ethics and communication in health care decision-making and describe an approach to the ethics consultation that places particular emphasis on the value of interpersonal deliberation in the search for moral understanding. I reach these conclusions through an analysis of the concept of 'moral development' in which I argue that the achievement of moral understanding is a necessarily intersubjective project elaborated by moral persons.

Original publication

DOI

10.1023/a:1013062902531

Type

Journal article

Journal

Theoretical medicine and bioethics

Publication Date

09/2001

Volume

22

Pages

451 - 459

Addresses

The Ethox Centre, University of Oxford, Institute of Health Sciences, UK. michael.parker@ethics-and-communication-in-health.oxford.ac.uk

Keywords

Humans, Truth Disclosure, Moral Development, Family, Interpersonal Relations, Decision Making, Personal Autonomy, Genetic Privacy, Bioethics, Moral Obligations, Female, Male, Genetic Testing