Refusal of life-saving treatment: the patient's rights
Dr Bridget Dolan, November 1997
Dr Bridget Dolan is a barrister-at-law, and is Hon. Senior Lecturer in Forensic Psychology at St George's Hospital Medical School, London. She has researched the legality of living wills, and here explains the legal basis for patient self-determination.
There is no right to die in British law, but there is a right of self-determination which goes as far as recognising your right to kill yourself. We have restrictions on what other people can do to you, but we do not have restrictions on what you can do to yourself. I am going to focus on a principle of law which you can use to stop people forcing life on you � self-determination.
Self-determination is bound up with two legal concepts, capacity and consent to treatment.
Consent
Under common law a doctor may only administer treatment when a patient gives consent.
A competent person is entitled to reject a treatment or select an alternative treatment, even if the decision entails serious risk of death. The patient's reasons for withholding consent can be rational, irrational, unknown or even non-existent [1].This respect for patient autonomy is one of the guiding principles of our medical law. The principle of self-determination will, in most cases, prevail above the competing principle of sanctity of life and will protect the right of a patient to decide what is to happen even should the decision be contrary to medical advice and even should it bring about death.