Monash Bioethics Review

, Volume 34, Issue 3–4, pp 158–188 | Cite as

The land of no milk and no honey: force feeding in Israel

Original Article

Abstract

In 2015, the Israeli Knesset passed the force-feeding act that permits the director of the Israeli prison authority to appeal to the district court with a request to force-feed a prisoner against his expressed will. A recent position paper by top Israeli clinicians and bioethicists, published in Hebrew, advocates for force-feeding by medical professionals and presents several arguments that this would be appropriate. Here, we first posit three interrelated questions: 1. Do prisoners have a right to hunger-strike? 2. Should governing institutions force-feed prisoners and/or is it ethical to force-feed prisoners? 3. Should healthcare professionals force-feed prisoners? We then focus on the first and third questions. We first briefly provide several arguments to support the right of prisoners to refuse treatment. Next, we critically review the arguments presented in the Israeli position paper, demonstrating that they are all misguided at best. Lastly, we briefly present arguments against force-feeding by medical professionals. We conclude that healthcare providers should not participate in the force-feeding of prisoners.

Keywords

Israel Force-feeding Torture Political prisoners 

Notes

Funding

The authors received no specific funding for this study.

Compliance with ethical standards

Conflict of interest

Both authors report no relevant conflict of interests.

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Copyright information

© Monash University 2017

Authors and Affiliations

  1. 1.The Centre for Biomedical Ethics, Yong Loo Lin School of MedicineNational University of SingaporeSingaporeSingapore
  2. 2.Department of History, Philosophy and Judaic StudiesThe Open University of IsraelHaifaIsrael

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