Study suggests
Doctor-assisted death wouldn’t undermine trust
Newswise — There is little evidence to support the argument
that legalizing physician-assisted death would reduce
patients’ trust in their doctors, according to a researcher
from Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center and
colleagues.
“Overall, three times as
many people disagree as agree that legalizing
physician-assisted death would cause them to trust their
personal doctors less,” said Mark Hall, J.D., professor of
public health sciences at Wake Forest Baptist and Fred D.
and Elizabeth L. Turnage Professor of Law at Wake Forest
University.
Hall and colleagues
designed a random telephone survey of 1,117 adults in the
United States to measure attitudes about physician aid in
dying. The results are reported in the current issue of the
Journal of Medical Ethics.
Survey participants were
asked to use a five-point scale to state their agreement or
disagreement with this statement: “Assume for the purpose of
this question that euthanasia were legal. If doctors were
allowed to help patients die, you would trust your doctor
less.” The question did not distinguish between
physician-assisted suicide, where the physician helps a
patient take his or her own life, and euthanasia, where the
physician directly administers the lethal dosage, because
prior studies found that attitudes are essentially the same
for both.
A majority (58 percent) of
participants disagreed with the statement. Only 20 percent
said that legalizing euthanasia would cause them to trust
their personal physician less. These attitudes were the same
in men and women.
Older adults (age 65 or
older) and blacks were more likely than other groups to say
physician aid in dying would lower trust, but this view was
still in the minority. Only 27 percent of older participants
and 32 percent of blacks said euthanasia would lower trust.
“Despite the widespread
concern that legalizing physician-assisted death would
seriously threaten or undermine trust in physicians, the
weight of the evidence in the United Sates is to the
contrary, although views vary significantly,” said Hall.
The debate over
physician-assisted death often includes assertions about the
impact on patient trust, yet there has been little data on
the subject, Hall said. There are two prior studies on the
topic, but they were confined to residents of Massachusetts
and Iowa, and they were generally consistent with the
findings from this study.
Hall said that public
policy advocates often overstate their case when they argue
that particular legal or ethical rules are necessary to
support trust. Even the U.S. Supreme Court has noted that
physician-assisted suicide could “undermine the trust that
is essential to the doctor-patient relationship by blurring
the time-honored line between healing and harming.”
Hall said that evidence
for this argument is weak.
“Our study shows that only
about 20 percent of people believe they would trust their
physician less if euthanasia were legalized,” he said. “The
empirical support is weak for those who confidently assert
that legalizing physician-assisted death would undermine
trust in physicians for most people in the United States.”
The researchers said,
however, that the research doesn’t necessarily support the
opposing side, either.
“We should not be cavalier
about potential threats to trust because, once it is lost,
it is far harder to rebuild than to sustain,” write the
authors. Banning physician-assisted suicide or euthanasia
could thus still be justified as a measure to avoid any
diminution in trust.”
Hall’s co-researchers are
Felicia Trachtenberg, Ph.D., from the New England Research
Institutes and Elizabeth Dugan, Ph.D., from the University
of Massachusetts Medical School. The research was funded by
the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Wake Forest University
Baptist Medical Center is an academic health system
comprised of North Carolina Baptist Hospital and Wake Forest
University Health Sciences, which operates the university’s
School of Medicine. The system comprises 1,187 acute care,
psychiatric, rehabilitation and long-term care beds and is
consistently ranked as one of “America’s Best Hospitals” by
U.S. News & World Report.