Abstract
Public opinion surveys and polls have a long history as tools for the reportage of public sentiment. Born in the “straw polls” of nineteenth century politics, their use expanded in the last century to include a range of commercial and social subjects. In recent decades, these have included issues of medico-legal uncertainty including, in a partial list, abortion, fetal tissue research, and the propriety of medical termination. Because public opinion surveys are assumed to be “scientific,” and thus unbiased, there has been little discussion of either their suitability in areas of complex, medico-legal uncertainty or the ethics of their use in these areas. This paper reviews their general history and then their use in the debate over medical termination, often called “medical aid in dying.” In this review, two problems are highlighted. First, there is the ambiguous nature of polls and the manner of their construction. Second, there is the manner in which they are deployed as simple and definitive statements in areas of complex medico-legal debate. The result calls for caution in their use by ethicists and a clear duty by both academics and journalists to understand the limits of the medium in areas of medico-legal debate and discussion.
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The author gratefully acknowledges the contributions of peer reviewers whose comments on an earlier draft significantly improved subsequent submissions.
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Koch, T. Problematic Ethics: Public Opinion Surveys in Medico-legal Disputes. HEC Forum 31, 1–10 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10730-018-9366-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10730-018-9366-3