<p>This article examines gynecological decision-making in clinical contexts where interventions carry significant implications for fertility and future reproductive possibilities. Conditions such as uterine fibroids, endometriosis, and ovarian cysts are commonly managed through treatments that differ in their potential impact on reproductive capacity, introducing an ethical dimension beyond immediate symptom management. This proposes a theological-bioethical framework of clinical discernment as a conceptual supplement to shared decision-making in reproductive healthcare. Drawing primarily on Karol Wojtyla’s personalist philosophy, it advances an account of the human person as an irreducible moral subject whose embodied life carries existential and relational significance. Clinical discernment is understood as a structured ethical orientation that enhances standard biomedical reasoning by integrating attention to value-laden dimensions of fertility-related care. The framework articulates hope as an ethically relevant category referring to the openness of the patient’s future possibilities, and fertility as a dimension of embodied personhood with relational meaning beyond biological function. On this basis, the article outlines a fertility-sensitive approach to gynecological care emphasizing proportionality in intervention, clarity and responsibility in risk communication, and holistic patient accompaniment. The paper concludes that integrating clinical discernment into gynecological decision-making offers a philosophically and theologically grounded enrichment of contemporary reproductive healthcare by aligning biomedical practice with a personalist account of moral agency, embodied dignity, and future-oriented care.</p>

错误:搜索内容不能为空,请输入英文关键词
错误:关键词超出字数限制,请精简
高级检索

Hope, fertility, and the ethics of clinical discernment: a personalist supplement to ethical decision-making in gynecological practice

  • John Mary Francis M. Nuqui,
  • Keycee L. Duarte

摘要

This article examines gynecological decision-making in clinical contexts where interventions carry significant implications for fertility and future reproductive possibilities. Conditions such as uterine fibroids, endometriosis, and ovarian cysts are commonly managed through treatments that differ in their potential impact on reproductive capacity, introducing an ethical dimension beyond immediate symptom management. This proposes a theological-bioethical framework of clinical discernment as a conceptual supplement to shared decision-making in reproductive healthcare. Drawing primarily on Karol Wojtyla’s personalist philosophy, it advances an account of the human person as an irreducible moral subject whose embodied life carries existential and relational significance. Clinical discernment is understood as a structured ethical orientation that enhances standard biomedical reasoning by integrating attention to value-laden dimensions of fertility-related care. The framework articulates hope as an ethically relevant category referring to the openness of the patient’s future possibilities, and fertility as a dimension of embodied personhood with relational meaning beyond biological function. On this basis, the article outlines a fertility-sensitive approach to gynecological care emphasizing proportionality in intervention, clarity and responsibility in risk communication, and holistic patient accompaniment. The paper concludes that integrating clinical discernment into gynecological decision-making offers a philosophically and theologically grounded enrichment of contemporary reproductive healthcare by aligning biomedical practice with a personalist account of moral agency, embodied dignity, and future-oriented care.