HETERO- / AUTONOMY IN THE CONTEXT OF SELF/DETERMINISM OF BIOLOGICAL TESTAMENTS

Authors

  • Suzana Vuletić Chair of Moral Theology, Catholic Faculty of Theology in Đakovo, Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek, Petra Preradovića 17, 31400 Đakovo, Republic of Croatia http://orcid.org/0000-0002-5629-6635
  • Silvana Karačić General Manager of the Hotel Sveti Križ, Ulica Domovinske Zahvalnosti 1, 21224 Trogir–Arbanija, Republic of Croatia https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2170-5432
  • Gordana Pelčić Chair of Social Sciencies and Humanities in Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, Braće Branchetta 20, 51000 Rijeka, Republic of Croatia https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3322-1470

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25234/pv/5991

Keywords:

right to self-determination, terminal patients, surrogate decision-makers, anticipated medical provisions, pre-established guidelines for end-of-life care, biological testaments/will

Abstract

A contemporary view of death is characterized by a sequence of uncertain and difficult questions arising from the clinical context, out of the legal and bioethical domains of taking difficult existential decisions related to the last moments of human life. This step requires a full rationality of free autonomy, which can be significantly disturbed by the loss of mental ability, conditioned by certain illnesses in certain moments. Therefore, patients should have a legislative opportunity to clearly state their wishes regarding the required treatment or the withdrawal in previously prepared guidelines of anticipated medical dispositions of the biological testaments for (non) treatment or the appointment of a surrogate representative of treatment choice at the terminal phase, in case of limited decision-making ability. The signed biological will could greatly contribute to a dignified mode of dying, consistent with the choice of autonomous patient’s end-of-life care values, which can often enter into collision from a heteronomous perspective of a surrogate decision-maker. With the biological will we could overwhelmingly overcome the difficulties of the clinical dilemma of existential decisions: Physicians would be more reliant on choosing care in urgent health care plans in crisis situations, the patients could provide the assurance of their self-determination while the surrogate rulers could be largely released from the pressure of responsibility.

Author Biographies

Suzana Vuletić, Chair of Moral Theology, Catholic Faculty of Theology in Đakovo, Josip Juraj Strossmayer University of Osijek, Petra Preradovića 17, 31400 Đakovo, Republic of Croatia

PhD, Associate Professor

Silvana Karačić, General Manager of the Hotel Sveti Križ, Ulica Domovinske Zahvalnosti 1, 21224 Trogir–Arbanija, Republic of Croatia

Doctoral candidate, Andrija Štampar School of Public Health

Gordana Pelčić, Chair of Social Sciencies and Humanities in Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Rijeka, Braće Branchetta 20, 51000 Rijeka, Republic of Croatia

PhD, Assistant Professor

Published

2018-07-25

Issue

Section

Review article