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Journal of medical ethics · Feb 2009
Prescribing placebos ethically: the appeal of negatively informed consent.
- D M Shaw.
- Dental School, Faculty of Medicine & Centre for Applied Ethics and Legal Philosophy, University of Glasgow, 378 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow. d.shaw@dental.gla.ac.uk
- J Med Ethics. 2009 Feb 1;35(2):97-9.
AbstractKihlbom has recently argued that a system of seeking negatively informed consent might be preferable in some cases to the ubiquitous informed consent model. Although this theory is perhaps not powerful enough to supplant informed consent in most settings, it lends strength to Evans' and Hungin's proposal that it can be ethical to prescribe placebos rather than "active" drugs. This paper presents an argument for using negatively informed consent for the specific purpose of authorising the use of placebos in clinical contexts.
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