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From Contract to Covenant in Advance Care Planning

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Abstract

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Type
Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 1999

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References

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By proxy, I mean a surrogate specifically designated by the patient for health care decisions while the patient had decision-making capacity. In some jurisdictions, this individual may be known as a durable power of attorney for health care or as a health care agent.Google Scholar
Introducing the notion of covenant into a discussion concerning the relationships that emerge through the use of advance directives is not without some weighty precedents in other areas of medicine. See Landis, D.A., “Physician Distinguish Thyself: Conflict and Covenant in a Physician's Moral Development,” Perspectives in Biology & Medicine, 36 (1993): 628–41; Crawshaw, R. et al., “Patient-Physician Covenant,” JAMA, 273 (1995): 1553; and Cassel, C.K., “The Patient-Physician Covenant: An Affirmation of Asklepios,” Annals of Internal Medicine, 124 (1996): 604–06.Google Scholar
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