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The psychiatrist's dilemma: a conflict of roles in legal executions.
Authors:A M Freedman  A L Halpern
Affiliation:New York Medical College, New York, USA. alfredm@pipeline.com
Abstract:In the United States, a critical controversy is taking place in regard to psychiatrists' and other physicians' participation in legal executions. Under pressure from the criminal justice system and legislatures to expedite executions, some forensic psychiatrists have succeeded in loosening traditional prohibitions against such participation. Further, there has been a weakening of the prohibition against treatment designed to facilitate immediate execution of those condemned to death. The rationale offered for these departures from current psychiatric ethical codes is the novel notion that when a psychiatrist acts in the court or criminal justice situation, that individual is no longer a psychiatrist and is not bound by psychiatric ethics. Rather, the forensic psychiatrist, termed a 'forensicist', serves as an assistant in the 'administration of justice' or 'an agent of the State' and thus works in a different ethical framework from the ordinary psychiatrist. This justification has similarities to the rationale offered by physicians involved in human experiments and other criminal acts in Nazi Germany, as well as psychiatrists in the former Soviet Union who explained their involvement in psychiatric abuse as a result of being agents of the State and thus not responsible for carrying out orders. Clearly, this controversy could be eliminated by a campaign for the abolition of capital punishment, characterised by the American Psychiatric Association as 'anachronistic, brutalizing [and] ineffective'. Such a campaign should serve as a call for psychiatrists and other physicians to join in the struggle to uphold ethical and moral principles.
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