Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Externalist argument against medical assistance...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Externalist argument against medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Externalist argument against medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness. / Maung, Hane Htut.
In: Journal of Medical Ethics, Vol. 49, No. 8, 01.08.2023, p. 553-557.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Maung HH. Externalist argument against medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness. Journal of Medical Ethics. 2023 Aug 1;49(8):553-557. Epub 2022 Sept 29. doi: 10.1136/jme-2022-108431

Author

Maung, Hane Htut. / Externalist argument against medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness. In: Journal of Medical Ethics. 2023 ; Vol. 49, No. 8. pp. 553-557.

Bibtex

@article{77a4541947db4eb1a22ef45081dbe924,
title = "Externalist argument against medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness",
abstract = "Medical assistance in dying, which includes voluntary euthanasia and assisted suicide, is legally permissible in a number of jurisdictions, including the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland and Canada. Although medical assistance in dying is most commonly provided for suffering associated with terminal somatic illness, some jurisdictions have also offered it for severe and irremediable psychiatric illness. Meanwhile, recent work in the philosophy of psychiatry has led to a renewed understanding of psychiatric illness that emphasises the role of the relation between the person and the external environment in the constitution of mental disorder. In this paper, I argue that this externalist approach to mental disorder highlights an ethical challenge to the practice of medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness. At the level of the clinical assessment, externalism draws attention to potential social and environmental interventions that might have otherwise been overlooked by the standard approach to mental disorder, which may confound the judgement that there is no further reasonable alternative that could alleviate the person's suffering. At the level of the wider society, externalism underscores how social prejudices and structural barriers that contribute to psychiatric illness constrain the affordances available to people and result in them seeking medical assistance in dying when they otherwise might not have had under better social conditions.",
keywords = "disabled persons, mental disorders, euthanasia, philosophy, psychiatry",
author = "Maung, {Hane Htut}",
year = "2023",
month = aug,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1136/jme-2022-108431",
language = "English",
volume = "49",
pages = "553--557",
journal = "Journal of Medical Ethics",
issn = "0306-6800",
publisher = "BMJ Publishing Group",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Externalist argument against medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness

AU - Maung, Hane Htut

PY - 2023/8/1

Y1 - 2023/8/1

N2 - Medical assistance in dying, which includes voluntary euthanasia and assisted suicide, is legally permissible in a number of jurisdictions, including the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland and Canada. Although medical assistance in dying is most commonly provided for suffering associated with terminal somatic illness, some jurisdictions have also offered it for severe and irremediable psychiatric illness. Meanwhile, recent work in the philosophy of psychiatry has led to a renewed understanding of psychiatric illness that emphasises the role of the relation between the person and the external environment in the constitution of mental disorder. In this paper, I argue that this externalist approach to mental disorder highlights an ethical challenge to the practice of medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness. At the level of the clinical assessment, externalism draws attention to potential social and environmental interventions that might have otherwise been overlooked by the standard approach to mental disorder, which may confound the judgement that there is no further reasonable alternative that could alleviate the person's suffering. At the level of the wider society, externalism underscores how social prejudices and structural barriers that contribute to psychiatric illness constrain the affordances available to people and result in them seeking medical assistance in dying when they otherwise might not have had under better social conditions.

AB - Medical assistance in dying, which includes voluntary euthanasia and assisted suicide, is legally permissible in a number of jurisdictions, including the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland and Canada. Although medical assistance in dying is most commonly provided for suffering associated with terminal somatic illness, some jurisdictions have also offered it for severe and irremediable psychiatric illness. Meanwhile, recent work in the philosophy of psychiatry has led to a renewed understanding of psychiatric illness that emphasises the role of the relation between the person and the external environment in the constitution of mental disorder. In this paper, I argue that this externalist approach to mental disorder highlights an ethical challenge to the practice of medical assistance in dying for psychiatric illness. At the level of the clinical assessment, externalism draws attention to potential social and environmental interventions that might have otherwise been overlooked by the standard approach to mental disorder, which may confound the judgement that there is no further reasonable alternative that could alleviate the person's suffering. At the level of the wider society, externalism underscores how social prejudices and structural barriers that contribute to psychiatric illness constrain the affordances available to people and result in them seeking medical assistance in dying when they otherwise might not have had under better social conditions.

KW - disabled persons

KW - mental disorders

KW - euthanasia

KW - philosophy

KW - psychiatry

U2 - 10.1136/jme-2022-108431

DO - 10.1136/jme-2022-108431

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 36175124

VL - 49

SP - 553

EP - 557

JO - Journal of Medical Ethics

JF - Journal of Medical Ethics

SN - 0306-6800

IS - 8

ER -