¿Sé y puedo? Toma de decisiones y consentimiento informado en trastornos demenciantes: dilemas diagnósticos y jurídicos

Arenas, Ángela; Slachevsky, Andrea

Keywords: dementia, disability evaluation, Clinical Decision-Making, Informed Consent.

Abstract

In Chile, more than 180 thousand people (1% of the population) have some form of dementia. The figure should increase to approximately 600,000 (3% of Chileans) by 2050. This disease poses major challenges to the society. One of them is the effective recognition of the autonomy and responsibility of the person living with this condition. This article aims to review the cli- nical assessment of competence, its agreement with the Chilean legal system and the challenges that the assessment of competence poses in clinical de- cision-making and the capacity of an individual make decisions, according to the new international obligations subscribed by Chile. It is concluded that inclusion is a pending challenge, reflected among other things, by the non-compliance with binding rules such as Article 12 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, which affirms that persons with disa- bilities have the right to be recognized as a person everywhere, before the law.

Más información

Título de la Revista: Revista Médica de Chile
Volumen: 145
Editorial: rev Med chile 2017; 145: 1312-1318
Fecha de publicación: 2017
Página de inicio: 1312
Página final: 1318
Idioma: castellano
Financiamiento/Sponsor: Programa Fondef id16AM0006.
Notas: WOS