Suffering at the Margins: Non-Experiential Suffering and Disorders of Consciousness.

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics Pub Date : 2025-03-18 DOI:10.1017/S0963180125000052
Jennifer Blumenthal-Barby
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Abstract

Research suggests that caregivers of patients with disorders of consciousness such as minimally conscious states (MCS) believe they suffer in some way. How so, if they cannot experience sensations or feelings? What is the nature of their suffering? This paper explores non-experiential suffering (NES). It argues that concerns about NES are really concerns about harms (e.g., dignity-based harms), but still face problems. Second, it addresses the moral importance of bearing witness to suffering. It explores several possible accounts: epistemic (bearing witness generates important knowledge), consequentialist (witnesses' interests also matter), and deontological (there is a duty to bear witness). It argues that witnessing suffering creates epistemic advantages and disadvantages for determining a patient's interests; that clinicians' interests to not bear witness may have considerable moral weight; and that the obligation to bear witness to NES is unclear.

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边缘的痛苦:非经验的痛苦和意识的紊乱。
研究表明,意识障碍患者(如最低意识状态(MCS))的护理人员认为他们在某种程度上受苦。如果他们不能体验感觉或感受,那又如何呢?他们痛苦的本质是什么?本文探讨了非经验痛苦(NES)。它认为,对NES的关注实际上是对危害的关注(例如,基于尊严的危害),但仍然面临问题。其次,它强调了见证苦难的道德重要性。它探讨了几种可能的解释:认识论(作证产生重要的知识),结果论(证人的利益也很重要)和义务论(有义务作证)。它认为,目睹痛苦会在确定患者利益方面产生认知上的优势和劣势;临床医生不愿作证的利益可能具有相当大的道德分量;而且还不清楚是否有义务向新能源公司作证。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
11.10%
发文量
127
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics is designed to address the challenges of biology, medicine and healthcare and to meet the needs of professionals serving on healthcare ethics committees in hospitals, nursing homes, hospices and rehabilitation centres. The aim of the journal is to serve as the international forum for the wide range of serious and urgent issues faced by members of healthcare ethics committees, physicians, nurses, social workers, clergy, lawyers and community representatives.
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