Monday, February 27, 2012

Is it ethically exceptable for a doctor to amputate an other wise healthy limb?


When apotemnophilia is being viewed as a neurological disorder due to right parietal lobe damage(s) I do not think that it is necessarily wrong to amputate an otherwise healthy limb. I do however find it to be an extreme solution and hope that other measures are being taken before amputation is performed.  It seems very important that doctors, surgeons and other professionals get to the bottom of cognitive and behavioral issues first.  If and when all other therapies and medications have been exhausted, then amputation may be the next step of therapy and wellness for someone.  Another problem to consider is that there is nothing to say for sure that a specific individual will feel relief and otherwise be happy.  But studies have shown this to be the case.
            It would seem easy for someone who is not suffering with this condition to view it as morally and ethically wrong for a surgeon to remove an otherwise healthy individual’s limb.  Again this is another example where the individual needs to make a decision on what’s going to be best for them.

1 comment:

  1. In Daniel Gilbert's book "Stumbling on Happiness", he examines evidence that shows that people will disabilities and other misfortunes are actually a lot happier than the average person percieves them to be (decreasing in effect with worse disabilities. According to this claim, it would actually seem moral to amputate a body part to relieve somebody of the emotional distress associated with body dysmorphic disorder, a distressing condition that often accompanies apotemnophilia. Of course, this treatment is extreme and should only be employed as a last resort, and only after extremely careful medical consideration.

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