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Non-Medical Goals of Treatment

Surgeon Richard Thompson has a brief article in the February 2011 British Journal of Hospital Medicine titled "Medical Futility: A Commonly Used and Potentially Abused Idea in Medical Ethics."  It is an elementary overview of the concept using a narrow range of dated sources.  But Thompson does helpfully remind us that patients have treatment goals other than the "obvious biological goals of most treatments."  These include:
  • Aesthetic (e.g. cosmetic surgery)

  • Hedonic (e.g. analgesia)

  • Personal (e.g. birth control)

  • Psychological (e.g. antidepressants)

  • Spiritual

If the treatment can achieve any one or more of these goals for the patient, is it futile?
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