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Attitudes of Lay People to Withdrawal of Treatment in Brain Damaged Patients.
[locked-in syndrome]
Whether
patients
in
the
vegetative
state
(
VS
)
,
minimally
conscious
state
(
MCS
)
or
the
clinically
related
locked-
in
syndrome
(
LIS
)
should
be
kept
alive
is
a
matter
of
intense
controversy
.
This
study
aimed
to
examine
the
moral
attitudes
of
lay
people
to
these
questions
,
and
the
values
and
other
factors
that
underlie
these
attitudes
.
One
hundred
ninety-
nine
US
residents
completed
a
survey
using
the
online
platform
Mechanical
Turk
,
comprising
demographic
questions
,
agreement
with
treatment
withdrawal
from
each
of
the
conditions
,
agreement
with
a
series
of
ethical
principles
and
three
personality
tests
.
More
supported
treatment
withdrawal
from
VS
(
40
.
2
Â
%
agreed
,
17
.
6
Â
%
disagreed
)
than
MCS
(
20
.
6
Â
%
,
41
.
2
Â
%
)
or
LIS
(
25
.
3
Â
%
,
35
.
8
Â
%
)
.
Agreement
with
treatment
withdrawal
was
negatively
correlated
with
religiosity
(
r
 
=
 
-
0
.
272
,
P
 
<
 
0
.
001
)
,
though
showed
no
significant
relationship
with
need
for
cognition
or
empathy
,
and
only
a
partial
association
with
utilitarian
judgment
in
a
standard
moral
dilemma
.
Support
for
treatment
withdrawal
was
most
strongly
associated
with
endorsement
of
the
importance
of
patient
autonomy
,
dignity
,
suffering
,
best
interests
.
Distributive
justice
was
not
given
significant
weight
by
most
.
Importantly
,
agreement
with
treatment
withdrawal
was
noticeably
higher
when
considered
from
a
first
as
opposed
to
third
person
perspective
for
VS
(
Z
 
=
 
-
6
.
056
,
P
 
<
 
0
.
001
)
,
MCS
(
Z
 
=
 
-
6
.
746
,
P
 
<
 
0
.
001
)
and
LIS
(
Z
 
=
 
-
6
.
681
,
P
 
<
 
0
.
001
)
.
Lay
attitudes
to
withdrawal
of
treatment
in
brain
damaged
patients
are
largely
shaped
by
values
similar
to
those
central
to
the
secular
ethical
debate
.
Neither
traditional
values
such
as
the
sanctity
of
life
nor
utilitarian
values
relating
to
resource
allocation
seem
to
play
a
central
role
.
Far
greater
weight
is
given
to
autonomy
,
which
may
explain
why
participants
were
far
more
willing
to
endorse
withdrawal
of
treatment
when
the
issue
was
presented
in
the
first
person
,
or
in
relation
to
a
concrete
case
involving
a
patient
's
explicit
wishes
.
Surveys
focusing
on
abstract
cases
presented
in
the
third
person
may
not
provide
an
accurate
picture
of
lay
attitudes
to
these
critical
ethical
questions
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"standard moral dilemma"
symptom
locked-in syndrome
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