Bioethics and the Law in Mexico

Abstract The results of an empirical study (Hall, 2017) show that, taken as a group, physicians in Mexico do not know what is legal and what is not legal with respect to certain areas of clinical practice. A number of legal cases are cited showing the ways in which the legal system is ineffective with respect to providing guidance on bioethical issues. We conclude that physicians in Mexico do not know what is legal and what is illegal with respect to bioethics because they cannot know (the law is unclear) and because they do not need to know (there is no effective legal precedent or enforcement). We suggest that the way forward must be through institutional policies establishing standards that depend only upon the traditional contract for medical care.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: García Camino,Bernardo, Hall,Robert T
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: Observatori de Bioètica i Dret - Cátedra UNESCO de Bioética 2020
Online Access:http://scielo.isciii.es/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1886-58872020000200008
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Abstract The results of an empirical study (Hall, 2017) show that, taken as a group, physicians in Mexico do not know what is legal and what is not legal with respect to certain areas of clinical practice. A number of legal cases are cited showing the ways in which the legal system is ineffective with respect to providing guidance on bioethical issues. We conclude that physicians in Mexico do not know what is legal and what is illegal with respect to bioethics because they cannot know (the law is unclear) and because they do not need to know (there is no effective legal precedent or enforcement). We suggest that the way forward must be through institutional policies establishing standards that depend only upon the traditional contract for medical care.