Surrogate consent: Difference between revisions
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|accessdate=2025-05-16 | |accessdate=2025-05-16 | ||
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<b>The author of the following paper has improperly labelled surrogate consent as <i>proxy consent.</b> | |||
* {{REFjournal | |||
|last=Bonyai | |||
|first= | |||
|init=J | |||
|author-link= | |||
|etal=no | |||
|title=Why Bioethics Matters in the Debate Over Routine Infant Circumcision | |||
|trans-title= | |||
|language= | |||
|journal=Ethics Today | |||
|location= | |||
|date=2026-04-05 | |||
|volume= | |||
|issue= | |||
|article= | |||
|page= | |||
|pages= | |||
|url=https://bioethicstoday.org/blog/why-bioethics-matters-in-the-debate-over-routine-infant-circumcision/# | |||
|archived= | |||
|quote=Circumcision is a surgical intervention, and like all surgeries, it carries inherent risks. These include pain, bleeding, infection, and, in rare cases, more serious complications. While many procedures occur without major incident, the ethical question is not simply whether harm is common, but whether the risk of harm is justified at all | |||
|accessdate=2026-06-11 | |||
}} | }} | ||
{{REF}} | {{REF}} | ||