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Related Experiment Videos

Paternalistic interventions with the gravely disabled.

B Spittle1

  • 1Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Otago Medical School, Dunedin, New Zealand.

The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
|March 1, 1992
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

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Paternalistic interventions can help gravely disabled individuals by balancing personal freedom with care. Financial management can ensure basic needs are met for those with diminished capacity, particularly those with alcohol dependence.

Area of Science:

  • Bioethics
  • Public Health
  • Sociology

Background:

  • Interventions with gravely disabled individuals involve complex ethical considerations.
  • Balancing personal freedom against the right to care is crucial in legal and ethical decision-making.
  • Principles of autonomy and beneficence guide interventions for those with diminished capacity.

Observation:

  • Gravely disabled individuals, particularly those with alcohol dependence or alcohol-related brain damage, may require external support.
  • Assessing the voluntariness of conduct is key when considering interventions.
  • Financial management can be a tool to ensure basic needs are met.

Findings:

  • Weak paternalistic interventions are justifiable for endangered individuals with diminished capacity and substantially nonvoluntary conduct.

Related Experiment Videos

  • Imposing financial management can lead to beneficial outcomes for individuals with alcohol dependence.
  • Ensuring basic needs are met and controlling excessive spending on alcohol can improve well-being.
  • Implications:

    • This approach supports ethical frameworks for intervening in the lives of vulnerable populations.
    • It highlights the potential of targeted financial management in public health interventions.
    • Further research can explore the long-term efficacy and ethical boundaries of such interventions.