Abstract

Background: Physician aid in dying (PAD) based on dementia is a contentious, highly debated topic. Several countries are considering extending their existing laws to include requests in incompetent patients based on a previously written advance directive. Discussions about this issue often invoke a distinction based on disease stage. The Dutch practice uses this distinction in classifications of dementia PAD cases and in guidance for clinicians. This paper explores the problem with this distinction for assessments of persons at the margins of competence.The Problem: Dutch guidance for clinicians uses an early vs. late-stage disease distinction to refer to requests from competent and incompetent persons. However, the use of disease stages is problematic, both conceptually and empirically. Conceptually, because it goes against very functional model of competence that guidance recognizes. Empirically, because it creates problems for classifying and evaluating patients at the margins of competence.Possible Ways Forward: Classification of cases and guidance should be based on competence, not disease stage. This requires rethinking decision-making for patients with dementia. Several possibilities are described, ranging from redefining the scope and role of advance directives in this context to exploring different types of decision-making frameworks.

Highlights

  • Physician aid in dying (PAD) based on dementia is a contentious topic that has gathered significant attention over the past decade

  • A similar distinction is used in the Dutch practice for classifying dementia PAD cases and in guidance for clinicians [7, 8]

  • This paper will argue that this distinction based on Physician Aid in Dying for Dementia disease stage creates conceptual confusion and insufficiently clear guidance for evaluating persons “at the margins of competence,” i.e., cases where it is unclear whether competence is retained or impaired

Read more

Summary

Background

Physician aid in dying (PAD) based on dementia is a contentious, highly debated topic. Several countries are considering extending their existing laws to include requests in incompetent patients based on a previously written advance directive. Discussions about this issue often invoke a distinction based on disease stage. The Dutch practice uses this distinction in classifications of dementia PAD cases and in guidance for clinicians. Because it goes against very functional model of competence that guidance recognizes Because it creates problems for classifying and evaluating patients at the margins of competence. Possible Ways Forward: Classification of cases and guidance should be based on competence, not disease stage This requires rethinking decision-making for patients with dementia.

INTRODUCTION
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
CONCLUSION
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call