A report from Poland: treatment and non-treatment of defective newborns

Bioethics. 1990 Apr;4(2):143-53. doi: 10.1111/j.1467-8519.1990.tb00075.x.

Abstract

KIE: The author and his colleagues surveyed pediatricians in Warsaw, Poland, to determine the doctors' attitudes toward treating infants with severe handicaps. They used a questionnaire originally designed by Australian researchers to survey pediatricians and compared their findings with those of the Australian study. Szawarski notes important differences between the approaches of Australian and Polish doctors to the treatment of handicapped newborns. Polish physicians tend to display an unconditional respect for life, a paternalistic attitude toward decision making, and an unwillingness to distinguish between ordinary and extraordinary means of prolonging life. Half the Polish respondents would be willing to preserve the lives of severely handicapped infants at all costs. Szawarski discusses six factors that may help to explain why Polish physicians have a different approach from that of their Western colleagues to the question of selective treatment of handicapped newborns.

MeSH terms

  • Attitude*
  • Australia
  • Catholicism
  • Codes of Ethics
  • Communism
  • Congenital, Hereditary, and Neonatal Diseases and Abnormalities*
  • Data Collection
  • Decision Making
  • Delivery of Health Care
  • Education, Medical
  • Ethics, Medical
  • Ethics, Professional
  • Euthanasia
  • Euthanasia, Active
  • Euthanasia, Passive*
  • Health Care Rationing
  • Homicide
  • Humans
  • Infant, Newborn*
  • Infanticide
  • International Cooperation
  • Internationality
  • Life Support Care
  • Moral Obligations
  • National Socialism
  • Nurses
  • Parents
  • Paternalism
  • Patient Care*
  • Pediatrics
  • Physicians*
  • Poland
  • Political Systems
  • Quality of Life
  • Resource Allocation
  • Social Responsibility
  • Socialism
  • State Medicine
  • Value of Life*