Healthy as a Trout – As Delicate as a Dragon-fly

Authors

  • Ann Munro Heesters University Health Network, Toronto; Joint Centre for Bioethics, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada

Keywords:

rehabilitation, autonomy, process-model of consent, postpartum depression, ethicist

Language(s):

English

Abstract

Rehabilitation hospitals provide a striking contrast between young, fit and largely able-bodied staff and patients who have experienced significant, often sudden, life-changing events. Bridging the gap between these worlds is not easy, but it can also be difficult to reconcile the values that the patients held before injury or illness with those that have begun to emerge on the road to recovery. Those working in rehabilitation medicine often endorse a process model of consent because they understand that patients with fresh injuries may need time for their values to adapt to their new lives. Despite this understanding, it can be a challenge to understand how best to respect patient autonomy whilst helping those same patients to appreciate some of the limits on their abilities. Drafting the following personal narrative, drawn from my own experience as a healthcare ethicist and reluctant patient, gave me greater insight into these perplexities. This reflection explores my changing approach to my professional practice – and especially my view of patient autonomy – in light of my own experience with post-partum depression.

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Published

2014-10-29

Issue

Section

Creative Works