http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/pregnant-...fter-mother-and-baby-die-20150406-1mf570.html
Does the state have a legitimate interest in overriding the mother's decision in order to potentially save the unborn child? After all the unborn child did not subscribe to the religious beliefs nor does it have the ability to give informed consent. How should this conflict of interests be resolved (if one indeed exists)? Or does the mother have an absolute right to decide.
Thoughts?A pregnant Jehovah's Witness and her baby have died after the woman refused a blood transfusion in a Sydney hospital.
Does the state have a legitimate interest in overriding the mother's decision in order to potentially save the unborn child? After all the unborn child did not subscribe to the religious beliefs nor does it have the ability to give informed consent. How should this conflict of interests be resolved (if one indeed exists)? Or does the mother have an absolute right to decide.
"Refusal of a lifesaving intervention by an informed patient is generally well respected, but the right of a mother to refuse such interventions on behalf of her fetus is more controversial," they wrote. "A doctor indeed has moral obligations to both the pregnant woman, and perhaps with differing priority to the unborn fetus. Circumstances where fetal and maternal autonomy conflict, or where fetal beneficence conflicts with maternal autonomy, create challenges."
Dr Kidson-Gerber said as more fetal-specific conditions become available, there would be more cases where the interests of the fetus and the interests of the mother conflicted.
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