Advance Will: Ensuring the Right to Autonomy for People with Mental Disabilities

Autor

  • Milda Žaliauskaitė Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15290/eejtr.2019.03.02.05

Słowa kluczowe:

advance will, advance directives, right to autonomy, mental illness, mental disability, mental health, mental health care

Abstrakt

People with chronic mental illnesses (e.g. bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, dementia, etc.) find it hard to maintain normal and independent everyday life. Due to these illnesses, people usually lose competence to make autonomous decisions about their treatment. However, in some cases those people are still competent to make reasonable decisions before the times of relapse or at the early stage of disease. As a possible solution, some jurisdictions offer instruments to express a patient’s will in advance (e. g. advance directives), where mentally ill patients may state their treatment and care preferences for the future time of incompetency. Although there is a lot of criticism presented by the scholars, legal instruments based on advance will may undoubtedly contribute to ensuring mentally disabled patients’ fundamental rights and quality of life. Therefore, this article will include an introduction of advance directives, the advantages this tool represents and discuss main regulation challenges.

Pobrania

Statystyki pobrań niedostępne.

Biogram autora

  • Milda Žaliauskaitė - Vytautas Magnus University, Lithuania

    PhD student at Vytautas Magnus University, Faculty of Law; Manager of science services and lawyer at Communication and Technology Transfer Center, VMU.

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Opublikowane

2019-12-31

Numer

Dział

Articles

Jak cytować

Advance Will: Ensuring the Right to Autonomy for People with Mental Disabilities. (2019). Eastern European Journal of Transnational Relations, 3(2), 73-83. https://doi.org/10.15290/eejtr.2019.03.02.05