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  1. Moving From Autonomy to Responsibility in HIV-Related Healthcare.John F. Tuohey - 1995 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 4 (1):64.
    No healthcare issue has generated as much ethical debate on the relationship between the individual and society as HIV Infection. In this debate, an appeal is most often made to such principles as autonomy and confidentiality to protect individuals who are HIV positive or who have AIDS from an invasion of privacy thought to be justified by society's need for information. In the first years, this emphasis on the protection of the individual was essential. Even today, there are risks in (...)
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  • Cruel choices: Autonomy and critical care decision-making.Christopher Meyers - 2004 - Bioethics 18 (2):104–119.
    Although autonomy is clearly still the paradigm in bioethics, there is increasing concern over its value and feasibility. In agreeing with those concerns, I argue that autonomy is not just a status, but a skill, one that must be developed and maintained. I also argue that nearly all healthcare interactions do anything but promote such decisional skills, since they rely upon assent, rather than upon genuinely autonomous consent. Thus, throughout most of their medical lives, patients are socialised to be heteronomous, (...)
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