Disfigured anatomies and imperfect analogies: body integrity
identity disorder and the supposed right to self-demanded amputation of healthy
body parts appeared in the current
issue of the Journal of Medical Ethics 35 (2009): 541-545. Dr D Patrone, Bioethics
Program, Union Graduate
College and Mount
Sinai School of
Medicine, Schenectady, New York, USA
Patients with the controversial diagnosis of body
integrity identity disorder (BIID) report an emotional discomfort
with having a body part (usually a limb) that they feel should not
be there. This discomfort is so strong that it interferes with routine
functioning and, in a majority of cases, BIID patients are motivated
to seek amputation of the limb. Although patient requests to receive
the best available treatment are generally respected, BIID demands
for amputation, at present, are not. However, what little has been
said in the ethics literature on the subject tends to favour doing
so in cases of BIID. The general argument is that BIID demands
should be respected, first, because of the importance that is
already placed on respecting autonomy in medical decision-making
contexts and second, because of the potential harm of not providing
amputation coupled with the fact that no alternative means of
relieving suffering exists. The defence of the right to
self-demanded amputation is thus typically supported by the use of
analogies with other unproblematical cases in order to show that the
denial of BIID patient demands is inconsistent with conventional
medical norms and practices. This paper criticises the
appropriateness of the particular analogies that are thought to shed
light on the allegedly unproblematical nature of BIID demands and
argues that a proper understanding of the respect for autonomy in
the medical decision-making context prohibits agreeing to BIID
demands for amputation.
Journal of Medical Ethics:
http://jme.bmj.com/current.dtl