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Speeches
AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF HEALTH, LAW AND ETHICS
FIRST ANNUAL CONFERENCE
CANBERRA, 15 NOVEMBER 1996
INAUGURAL KIRBY LECTURE ON HEALTH, LAW AND ETHICS
HEALTH, LAW AND ETHICS
The Honourable Justice Michael Kirby AC CMG
1
A UNIQUE COMPLIMENT
Anyone who has held public office for as long as I have
- almost exactly 22 years - is bound to collect a few honours,
if only for longevity and survival. In my case, I have received
more than my fair share. Civil honours. Medals. Honorary Degrees.
Fellowship of Colleges. I cannot pretend that I am indifferent
to them. They are the rewards for countless hours spent in
contemplation and preparation of addresses such as this. When
other, saner, citizens are lifting a glass of Chardonnay to
reflect it in the sunshine against a blue sky, I am almost
certainly working in my office upon some judgment, article,
speech or other worthy enterprise.
The naming of a lecture is something new. I am immensely
flattered by it. Yet, as someone who has given countless lectures,
all of them carefully preserved, numbered and recorded over
the 22 years, I confess to mixed feelings.
First, I am glad indeed that it is not a memorial lecture.
To escape the obligation of giving it by such a ruse might
be too great a sacrifice. Secondly, I feel guilty for those
future lecturers, dragged away from the innocent enjoyments
of humanity to prepare such of the succeeding lectures as
remain to be given. Why should they have inflicted upon them
the burdens which I have so willingly, even enthusiastically,
accepted these past two decades? But then I am glad because
a public lecture is a means by which one person can convey
thoughts which, it is hoped, will be concentrated, for the
consideration of a faithful audience. Unless it be given by
the Dame from Moonie Ponds or that master of disguise and
deception, Campbell McComas, the lecture will, inescapably,
have an intellectual flavour. A country which rejoices in
its triumphs of excellence in sport insufficiently celebrates
the world of intellect, of thought and of ideas. If, in my
name, this lecture series endures and promotes public discussion
of contemporary issues of importance for our fellow citizens,
that will be a wonderful memorial to my efforts. Because I
am an unashamed egg-head, and aspire to contribute to the
intellectual debate in this country, I am glad, and grateful,
that you have chosen to honour me in this way.
That the lecture is in the field of health, law and ethics
is also specially warming to me. Virtually from the start
of my public career in the Australian Law Reform Commission,
I was required to address the controversies of health, law
and ethics. One of the first references given to the Law Reform
Commission by the Federal Attorney-General required it to
make proposals for law reform in the field of human tissue
transplants 2
. That was a most important project, not only for its subject
matter but also because it demonstrated that difficult questions,
involving health, law and ethics could, in an enlightened
modern democracy, be tackled in a public way. It showed that
we could achieve results in legislation, not just a report
consigned to the too hard drawer or public debate leading
nowhere. In the course of the Law Reform Commission's project
on human tissue transplants we had to examine many difficult
and controversial questions:
The definition of death; The adoption of a regime of donation
or a regime of taking - with the privilege of opting out;
The acceptability of payment for body parts; The availability
of donation by a legal minor; The rights of relatives to over-ride
the wishes of the deceased to donate their body, or parts,
either for research or organ donation; and The then novel
development of in vitro fertilisation, the consideration of
which was postponed on the footing that it raised legal and
ethical problems of a different character from those presented
by the donation of particular organs
3 .
Many other projects of the Law Reform Commission required
me to address particular issues relevant to health, law and
ethics. These included the issue of the compulsory reporting
of child abuse in the Commission's report on child welfare
4
; the various questions of medical confidentiality raised
by the Commission's report on privacy
5 ; the privilege attaching
to medical information in the Commission's work on the law
of evidence 6
and several others.
But it is not so much my work in the Law Reform Commission
that has stimulated my thinking in recent years on the topics
of your concern. Instead, three developments have captured
my attention. They remain of close interest to me. They are:
1. The ethical and legal questions presented by the advent
of the HIV/AIDS epidemic;
2. The ethical and legal questions presented by the Human
Genome Project and the Human Genome Diversity Project; and
3. The complex public policy questions raised by the attempts
to apply ethical principles to the allocation of healthcare
resources and, in particular, to adopt cost-benefit analysis
in the context of healthcare.
Each of these questions has significant importance for the
politics of healthcare in Australia and beyond.
My awareness of the AIDS epidemic was stimulated by the
invitation which I received to address one of the early national
conferences on AIDS 7
. In the way of these things, one conference led to another.
I was soon appointed to the World Health Organisation Global
Commission on AIDS. I began to know some of the leading scientists,
epidemiologists and ethicists working in the field of HIV/AIDS.
I also began to see the sharp edge of the epidemic in the
illness and death of close friends who became infected with
the virus. I could also see the exhaustion of their families,
partners and healthcare workers.
My involvement in genomic issues has been more recent. It
arose out a conference which I attended in Bilbao, Spain.
At that conference there were four Nobel Laureates whose work
was instrumental to the early development of the Human Genome
Project. This is the greatest scientific cooperative project
in history. I was astonished both at the remarkable scientific
potential of the work, as described, and at the almost total
lack of public knowledge and debate about the ethical implications.
In particular, the ignorance within the legal profession of
the Human Genome Project and of its many legal ramifications
required, as it seemed to me, correction and redress. I suppose
that it was my early exposure to Methodist parsons that led
me to assume the self-appointed mantle of the educator of
the Australian legal profession on some of the issues presented
by the advances in genetics. I wrote up the conference in
Bilbao, Spain. My article was published in the Australian
Law Journal 8
. I began to talk on the topic at conferences
9 and on the radio
10 . Probably because
I had been critical of the Human Genome Organisation for failing
to ensure that the ethical debate proceeded with the same
energy as the scientific research, I was invited last year
to join the Ethics Committee of the Organisation. I will shortly
be proceeding to San Francisco for a meeting of that body.
Then, out of the blue, the Director-General of UNESCO asked
me to join the International Bioethics Committee. This is
the body which is preparing a Draft Convention on the
Human Genome 11
. I hope to attend a meeting of the Legal Committee of that
body in Paris in late December.
Out of recognition of the importance of medical and healthcare
issues for the future of human rights, the International Commission
of Jurists has accepted my recommendation that it adopt, amongst
its future human rights concerns, the following topics of
relevance to health, law and ethics:
1. The human rights of homosexual and bisexual men and women;
2. The human rights of drug users and drug-dependent persons;
3. The human rights of people infected with HIV/AIDS; and
4. The human rights of future generations, including of
the human species as it will be affected by the Human Genome
Project, by modern information technology and by other contemporary
technological developments.
APPEARANCE & REALITY
You could say that the foregoing tale of issues of health,
law and ethics, of which I have briefly reminded you, demonstrates
what can be done by a somewhat pushy individual who sees futuristic
topics before others do and runs with them, making every post
a winner. I confess that it looks a little that way, viewed
in retrospect. But that is not the whole story.
I did not ask the Federal Attorney-General, Mr Bob Ellicott,
to give the forward-looking project on human tissue transplants
to the Law Reform Commission. It was entirely his own idea.
He, and not I, must take the credit for seeing the importance
of that topic. So it was with the other projects of the Law
Reform Commission mentioned. And in any case, each of the
projects was led by a distinguished Commissioner and involved
a team of highly talented lawyers, with specialist consultants
who engaged in extensive community debate. For example, the
project on human tissue transplants was led by Mr Russell
Scott whose book The Body as Property
12 is a masterpiece.
The Commission for that project included lawyers of great
reflection who went on to the highest offices in our country.
The included Sir Zelman Cowen who became Governor-General
and Sir Gerard Brennan who is now Chief Justice of Australia.
None of the projects in which I have been engaged has been
a one-man-band.
The terrible devastation of HIV/AIDS has called forward
excellent and thoughtful work in Australia and overseas, including
on ethical 13
and legal 14
issues. My interest in the topic may have been early for Australia.
But all I did was to communicate some of the issues that were
then being addressed in United States law journals. I suspect
that it was no more than the novelty of a judge expressing
interest in the ethical and legal implications of the epidemic
that occasioned my appointment to the Global Commission on
AIDS. But that has led onto involvement in numerous international
activities since: most recently in Geneva in September 1996
at a consultation on HIV/AIDS and human rights
15 .
Similarly, it was pure chance that led to my involvement
in the meeting on the legal aspects of the Human Genome Project
in Bilbao. Before that time, I had been participating in a
series of meetings, having nothing to do with the Human Genome
organised by a Spanish Foundation concerned with many social
questions. It just happened that the Foundation (the BBC Foundation)
had previously conducted meetings on the scientific and ethical
implications of genomic research. When it decided to convene
a meeting on the legal issues, I assumed that my name popped
up.
So, far from being a cleverly crafted, well-conceived and
pre-planned exercise of rationality, my involvement in each
of the projects that took me into fields relevant to the politics
of healthcare, has been as serendipitous as the lives of each
member of my audience. One thing has simply led to another,
just as, in life, one day leads to the next.
FIVE ABIDING THEMES
The advent of a lecture named for me has caused me to ask
myself what, if anything, I have done to deserve such an honour.
That, of course, is for the sponsors, and you, to decide.
Perhaps after this inaugural lecture the series will be renamed
when the sponsors realise the awful truth that their hero
is a mere accident of timing and that there are others with
greater deserts for an eponymous lecture. Brennan, Cowen or
Scott in the field of human tissue transplants. Charlesworth
or Chalmers, Nicol or Skene in the field of genetics. Patterson,
Hamblin or Watchirs in the field of HIV/AIDS. Singer, Kühse
or Tom Campbell himself in the general field of medical ethics.
A few issues only I have sought to contribute. I will state
them, as I think they may be important:
1. Open debate : The first is that, as
civilised citizens, we have an obligation to raise questions
concerning health, law and ethics as often and as loudly as
possible so that more and more of our fellow citizens will
think about them. So that more of our political leaders will
realise that they exist. So that it will be understood that
they are not issues, as such, for experts only - although
expert analysis can help. They are questions upon which every
thinking citizen needs to be informed and about which the
opinions of fellow citizens have a legitimacy which must be
recognised by the experts;
2. New technology: new problems : The
second is to be alert to the constantly changing mosaic of
the legal and ethical issues relevant to healthcare. To realise
that the great engine of our time is science and technology
and that it has extremely important and constantly changing
implications for healthcare. No sooner do we think that we
have reached a solution to one vexed topic (say, artificial
insemination donor) that another (say, human tissue transplantation
or in vitro fertilisation) comes along. No sooner are we done
with this than still further problems present (say, legislation
on euthanasia or the puzzling dilemmas of genomic research).
The ethical dilemmas in the field of healthcare are unending.
Science and technology promise that, far from becoming simpler,
they will become much more difficult. And they will be unyielding.
They will relentlessly continue to present themselves. Those
that are interested must be ready to meet them. They should
develop techniques for their consideration and solution, realising
that solutions are rarely final because, with changing technology,
come changing dimensions of the problems;
3. Inaction is a decision : The third
is to appreciate that to do nothing is, in effect, to make
a decision. To do nothing about HIV/AIDS is to condemn fellow
human beings, without vaccine or cure, to infection through
ignorance or because society is unwilling to take the hard
decisions that will contain the spread of the virus. To do
nothing about in vitro fertilisation is to paper over the
cracks of the ethical and legal dilemmas raised and to ignore
the substantial questions of resource allocation which the
technique presents. To do nothing about the future lines of
genomic research may be to countenance animal/human hybrid
experimentation or manipulation of the germ-line of the human
species. It may be to permit the creation of a "super-species"
and genetic developments that cannot easily be foreseen. The
four Nobel Laureates at the Bilbao conference I mentioned
joined in an appeal to the final session of the conference
urging a moratorium on all experimentation which would affect
the human germ-line. Genomic experimentation should be restricted
to living patients who stand to benefit (and are at risk of
suffering) from it. The human rights of future generations
should be left intact at this stage of human knowledge. Yet
unless law, perhaps international law in the form of the UNESCO
Convention, can provide effective prohibitions, what is there
(save funding controls) to prevent scientists in the quest
of fame, fortune or simple curiosity, from pursuing their
experiments as they think fit? It is extremely important to
realise in the field of modern medical research that to do
nothing is to make a decision. It does not leave things as
they are. This is because science and technology are constantly
changing the reality of this world;
4. Assisting democratic institutions :
The fourth is the importance of helping our institutions to
cope. Those who, like myself, believe in the essential wisdom
of democratic institutions and are servants or supporters
of Australia's democratic Constitution, must assist our democracy
to face the dilemmas and puzzles of recent developments in
health, law and ethics. These dilemmas present novel challenges
to the organs of democracy which they find it difficult to
solve. Recent debates in Australia (including some still current)
demonstrate the strong passions which can be engendered, on
both sides. They can encompass issues involving the legal
and ethical ramifications of healthcare. The debates concerning
the state of the nation's abortion laws surfaced in the High
Court in an appeal from a New South Wales Court of Appeal
decision in which I had participated
16 . The settlement
of the appeal means that we will not have a decision of the
High Court on the topic, at least at this time. It is worth
commenting that there is no immediate evidence that the democratic
legislatures of Australia are rushing to fill the gap or to
examine and settle the expressed doubts. On the contrary,
they seem only too prepared to leave abortion law alone. This
seems to be so despite significant and relevant changes in
social attitudes and medical practice in recent decades. Similarly,
the issue of access to medical records in the possession of
private practitioners was the subject of court decisions,
including recently of the High Court
17 . That was also on
appeal from an earlier decision in which I had participated
judicially 18
. The High Court rejected the attempts to extend, in this
country, an enforceable legal right such as had been found
in other jurisdictions 19
. In Australia, it seems, the provision of such a right must
await legislation. Although the former Federal Government
had foreshadowed such legislation, its passage is now uncertain.
Important questions are therefore raised in Australian courts.
There, judicial decision-makers cannot usually avoid the provision
of answers. The democratically elected parliaments have not
always been so forthcoming. As the recent cases on abortion
and access to health records have demonstrated, these are
topics upon which passions are easily raised. Interest groups
can soon be attracted on each side of the debate. Strong arguments
can be expressed, some of them resting on rational discourse;
some resting on dogmatic or religious belief; and some grounded
in emotion and deeply held feelings. Alas, these tend to be
either the topics which democratically elected politicians
prefer to leave alone. Or they attract passionate and conflicting
opinions which engender more heat then light and result in
an impasse in the democratic lawmaking process which brings
little credit to the legislators. Such inaction may be inescapable
in some topics. But as a general response to the legal and
ethical controversies of public health, it is neither good
for health nor for the democratic character of our society.
This is why new means are needed to assist in promoting rational
discussion and the provision of principled solutions for difficult
problems. The Law Reform Commission, and similar specialist
and interdisciplinary bodies, provide one model of the kind
that is needed. I like to think that the Australian Institute
of Health, Law and Ethics will provide another and additional
model.
5. The intellectual challenge : Finally,
to engage in these debates is worthwhile in itself as an intellectual
exercise. It is also intensely fascinating. This is because
the legal and ethical issues of public health are extremely
interesting and important topics. They tend to touch deep
wellsprings of human existence. One must not stereotype. However,
my own experience has been that the people engaged in medico-legal-ethical
questions, relevant to health, are extremely interesting and
highly stimulating colleagues who can see the importance,
high controversy and subtlety of the questions presented for
answer. The dilemmas that are posed are worthy of attention.
Because they concern basic questions of life and death, of
pain and human suffering and, now, of no less than the future
of our species, they are specially worthy of attention. For
me, they present a never ending kaleidoscope of intriguing
problems. Humanity has its intelligence in order to puzzle
its way to informed answers. That is why I am specially glad
that this Institute has honoured me by this lecture. I hope
that some of the themes of my own life in this area will continue
to inform the lectures that may follow.
THE POLITICS OF HEALTHCARE
I realise that the theme of the 1996 conference of the Institute
is the politics of healthcare. When a judge - especially a
Justice of the High Court of Australia - hears the word "politics",
he or she tends to take cover. Especially when it is revealed
that politicians will be taking a (most proper) part in the
conference. And especially when it is remembered that healthcare
is one of the most hotly debated political topics in this
country upon which there are legitimate differences of opinion
reflected in party-political programmes. I was reminded of
this when I saw the recent headline in the Canberra Times
20
: "Opposition to Fight Limit on Medicare Numbers: Lee".
Rationing health care is always a sensitive topic. So I must
tread with care.
It would be inappropriate for me to enter too deeply into
the politics of healthcare, at least so far as the political
choices involved are those which are bound up in the healthy
party disputation which is a feature of our democracy. In
such matters, most of you are much freer than I am. Nevertheless,
in a general sense and without partisan commitment, it is
possible for us to recognise, in recent years, a growing understanding
that the allocation of healthcare resources has an ethical
dimension which sometimes presents itself in a legal case
and which is ultimately the source of competing political
strategies, advanced for popular endorsement.
In 1990, the National Health and Medical Research Council
of Australia, in its Discussion Paper on Ethics and Resource
Allocation said:
"In the allocation of any public resource our concern
should be primarily with justice. This involves giving to
each person his or her due. In allocating healthcare resources
our concern is largely with the distributive justice - to
distribute among members of the community those benefits and
burdens due to them. The basis of distributive justice is
the notion of fairness. The most appropriate criterion for
a fair distribution of resources would appear to be those
of equity and need. More specifically, a just allocation should
offer equal treatment to those whose needs are similar. In
other words, each person is entitled to enjoy an appropriate
share of the sum total of resources available according to
their need. However, the need which justifies one person's
entitlement must be a need which can be fulfilled in a way
compatible with fulfilling the similar needs of others"
21
.
The problems of ethical decision-making in the allocation
of healthcare is as ancient as the allocation of the scarce
resources of medical and nursing attention and of available
therapies. The triage in every modern hospital represents
the daily application, in the most basic way, of the allocation
of scarce healthcare resources. Recently, writers have been
attempting to reduce the norms to be applied to the problem
of allocation to scientific formulae. A typical analysis is
that of M C Weinstein and W B Stason
22 . They attempted
the expression of a formula which would take into account
direct and indirect costs of hospitalisation, physician time,
medications, laboratory services, counselling and other ancillary
services together with a component for the adverse effects
of treatment and another for savings in healthcare, rehabilitation
and custodial costs resulting from the prevention or alleviation
of disease. In their equations, a component was also allowed
for the cost of treating diseases which would not have occurred
if the patient had not lived longer as a result of the original
treatment. The writers then compare these costs with quantitative
measures for the increase in the expected number of life years.
They acknowledge that it is necessary to inject a controversial
factor for "quality-adjusted life years". This unscientific,
or at least unmeasurable, factor injects matters of opinion
upon which there could be no consensus.
Whilst this approach is an interesting one, and has the
benefit of identifying some of the considerations which might
otherwise be taken into account only subconsciously, it could
not pretend to be a complete analysis. For example, it makes
no provision for opportunity costs involved in providing a
particular treatment or technology to a particular patient.
Nevertheless, as economists have increasingly come to dominate
political life in societies such as Australia's (including
in the law and in healthcare) it is inevitable that the politics
of healthcare will take on more and more of the jargon of
economic cost analysis. So we should all be aware of it. Politicians
and officials certainly are.
There is a danger in this development, as every person working
in the healthcare field with real human patients quickly realises.
Equations fail to measure the precious quality of the individuals
concerned to those who love them. They cannot look on them
as simply the consumers of an economic resource. In purely
economic terms, it could possibly be argued that we would
do better to withdraw entirely public funds from the in vitro
fertilisation programme. Similarly there are doubtless some
who would argue, on cost/benefit grounds that we are not spending
the health dollar effectively on the highly expensive therapies
available to improve the quality of life and prolong the existence
of people living with HIV/AIDS. The decisions which we make
on these topics are complicated by the fact that we know individuals
who have experienced the great suffering of childlessness
and the exquisite joy of childbirth by the IVF process. We
also know courageous friends and their wonderful carers who
live very day in our midst with HIV or AIDS. It is this additional
ingredient - the human factor - that adds to the complications
of attempts to reduce the allocation of healthcare resources
to a scientific formula. Even if it could be done, there would
remain acute and continuing problems. Might there be greater
benefits to society, as a whole, in spending scarce resources
on other technologies or therapies for different people? In
the spending of funds on prevention rather than on the treatment
of ill-health? In the spending of funds on education or on
beautification of the environment? Or in just reducing the
$8 billion budget deficit in the hope of stimulating more
jobs that will get young people off the streets, reduce civic
despair, prevent the emergence of a permanent underclass and
reduce the incidence of drug-dependence, crime and other evidence
of social escapism.
These are the reasons why many commentators on this subject
see it as vital to expose the dilemmas which are faced by
individual healthcare workers and by society as a whole. Various
writers express this thought 23
:
"At present these decisions are taken by large numbers
of physicians working in isolation, and the result is a haphazard
aggregation of individual decisions. Effectively, society
is represented in the decision-making process by samples of
one, which ... is unrepresentative and thus inescapably unsatisfactory.
Society should not ask doctors to bear the burden of decision-making,
not only because it is inefficient but also because the choices
(as distinct from the implementation of those choices) should
have a social rather than a professional base."
We may not agree that it would necessarily be a step in
the right direction to turn all such choices over to a depersonalised
social base, for fear that this would be grounded entirely
in economic rationalism. Nevertheless, it is increasingly
recognised that, in the allocation of the scarce resources
available for healthcare, some decisions must be made which
will have implications down the line for individual healthcare
providers and their patients. Today those providers may even
be policed by computer monitoring of prescription patterns
and by caps on medical and other health benefits. At least
the national and even international triage is now an issue
which is out in the open. Healthcare workers have stopped
"covering up for an inadequate health service".
Increasingly, they bluntly disclose the choices that have
to be made, including between, for example, the risk of the
death of a particular patient and the scarce resources available
to prevent or reduce the risk of such death
24 . Professor B V Johnstone
contrasted the openness which is now occurring with the alternative
which formerly obtained:
"Physicians, acting as gate-keepers, exclude some patients
on a priori economic grounds based on government policies.
Physicians might conceal the economic and political reasons
for the policy behind statements that the patient is not suitable,
or simply not mentioning the availability of the treatment.
Such a process would violate justice in excluding the patient
from being a participant in the decision. It would be morally
questionable in inducing the physician to violate the requirements
of his moral agency, specifically to forego the role of advocate
for the patient, and to fail to honour his trust relationship
with the patient" 25
.
These are the reasons why many commentators on legal and
ethical issues of healthcare advocate openness about the politics
of healthcare decisions. Professor Margaret Somerville, an
Australian now living and working in Canada, expressed this
thought well. In a paper with the provocative title "Should
the Grandparents Die? - Allocation of Resources with an Aging
Population" 26
, Professor Somerville concluded:
"Unfortunately, we may not be able to find any 'right'
answers - ones that harm no-one - in allocating medical resources
with an aging population. We can, however, use 'right' decision-making
principles and processes. General goodwill and personal conscience
and integrity are essential traits but not sufficient approaches
or safeguards in dealing with the issues raised. Examined
cognitive and emotional responses and structures and disciplined
procedures are also necessary. To develop these is one of
the major challenges for contemporary health law and ethics.
Such development is essential in the search for answers to
the companion question of 'should the baby live?' and 'should
the grandparents die?'. These answers will reflect some of
the most important aspects of ethical and legal tones of our
communities are we prepare to enter the 21st century"
27
.
Some observers argue that an intuitive approach to decision-making
and reasoning on these questions is more reliable and less
self-deceptive than attempts to adopt scientific formulae
informed by economic postulates and expressed in complicated
equations. Yet the danger of intuition and generalised reasoning
(such as we are used to in the courts) may be that their procedures
mask unexpressed pre-conceptions, misunderstandings and prejudices.
They may obscure assumptions and disguise the premises for
decision-making. Just as technology reflects a more scientific
world, so should our ethical decisions. They should aspire
to greater precision, clarity and accuracy, at least in the
procedures which we adopt. In the end, resource allocation,
whether individual, national or international, involves a
leap of human judgment. That may ultimately involve intuition.
However, such decisions will be better made, and more likely
to be just, if they are made after the accurate exposure of
the most relevant pre-conditions for their making. Not only
will that course submit those pre-conditions to individual
and social criticism and possible change. It will also impose
on the decision-maker a discipline and self-scrutiny which
the vital importance of healthcare decisions demands from
a civilised society. So that is where ethics enters the political
debates about health care. It is why the work of this Institute
is so important and potentially influential.
CONCLUSION: AN AGENDA FOR DEBATE
I conclude as I began. In a life of many public opportunities
and privileges, few have pleased me more than the decision
of this Institute to name a lecture for me. I hope that the
lecture series will encourage the pursuit of some of the themes
which I have mentioned. Enlivening public debate on the legal
and ethical issues of healthcare. Involving our fellow citizens
as well as the experts. Enlivening the procedures of our democratic
polity. Engaging the stimulating and interesting colleagues
who make up this Institute in dialogue with each other, and
with society, about the acute dilemmas that face humanity.
Promoting a knowledge of the wonders of science and medical
technology and their relevance to ethical decisions. The dilemmas
we have faced to date will be as nothing in comparison to
those just around the corner in the new millennium. Of one
thing we can be sure. There will be no shortage of topics
for this lecture series. I am proud to have been asked to
give the first. Those in the future will address topics which
we cannot even imagine and dilemmas of the greatest difficulty
and importance which confront our nation and face our species.
| 1 |
Justice of the High
Court of Australia. One-time Chairman of the Australian
Law Reform Commission, Judge of the Federal Court of Australia
and President of the New South Wales Court of Appeal.
President of the International Commission of Jurists.
|
| 2 |
Australian Law Reform Commission, Human Tissue
Transplants, (ALRC 7) 1977, AGPS, Canberra.
|
| 3 |
Ibid, xiv.
|
| 4 |
The Law Reform Commission, Child Welfare (ALRC
18), 1981, AGPS, Canberra.
|
| 5 |
The Law Reform Commission, Privacy (ALRC 22),
AGPS, Canberra, 1983.
|
| 6 |
The Law Reform Commission, Evidence (ALRC
26), AGPS, Canberra, 1985.
|
| 7 |
M D Kirby, "AIDS Legislation - Turning Up the
Heat" (1986) 60 ALJ 324.
|
| 8 |
M D Kirby, "Legal Problems: Human Genome Project"
(1993) 67 ALJ 894.
|
| 9 |
eg M D Kirby, "The Human genome Project and Society",
unpublished address to the Federation of Asian and Oceanian
Biochemists and Molecular Biologists, 7th Congress, Sydney,
28 September 1995; M D Kirby, "Bioethics, the Human
Genome Project and Our Future", unpublished address
to the Australian Bioethics Association, Fourth National
Conference, St John's College, Brisbane, 25 September
1995.
|
| 10 |
M D Kirby, "The Challenge of the Human Genome
Project" (1996) 9 Australian Biologist at
103. The subject was also dealt with in the Australian
Broadcasting Commission's programme Ockham's Razor and
in a programme of the Law Report in October 1996.
|
| 11 |
UNESCO, Preliminary Draft of the Universal Declaration
of the Human Genome and Human Rights.
|
| 12 |
Viking, New York, 1981.
|
| 13 |
D C Jayasuriya (ed) HIV Law, Ethics and Human Rights,
UNDP, New Delhi, 1995.
|
| 14 |
J Godwin and Ors Australian HIV/AIDS Legal Guide
(2nd ed), Federation, 1993. See also D C Jayasuriya,
AIDS - Public Health and Legal Dimensions , Nijhoff,
Dordrecht, 1988.
|
| 15 |
The report of that consultation will be published by
UNAIDS and the U.N. Centre for Human Rights later in 1996.
Cf J Mann and Ors, AIDS in the World - A Global Report
, Harvard, 1994.
|
| 16 |
CES v Superclinics (Australia) Pty Ltd (1995)
38 NSWLR 47 (CA).
|
| 17 |
Breen v Williams (1996) (as yet unreported).
|
| 18 |
Breen v Williams (1994) 35 NSWLR 522 (CA).
|
| 19 |
See eg R v Mid Glamorgan Family Health Services
Authority; Ex parte Martin [1995] 1 WLR 110; [1995]
1 All ER 356 (United Kingdom); McInerney v MacDonald
(1992) 93 DLR (4th) 415 (Canada); Cannell v Medical
and Surgical Clinic 315 NE 2d 278 (1974) (United
States).
|
| 20 |
The Canberra Times , 4 November 1996, p1.
|
| 21 |
NH & MRC Australia, Discussion Paper ,
AGPS, Canberra, 1990.
|
| 22 |
M C Weinstein and W B Stason, "Foundations of
Cost-Effectiveness Analysis for Health and Medical Practice"
296 New England J Med 716 (1977) quoted in W J Curran
and E D Shapiro, Law, Medicine and Forensic Science,
3rd ed, Little Brown and Co, Boston at 726.
|
| 23 |
P A Lewis and M Charny, "Which of Two Individuals
Do you Treat When Only Their Ages are Different and You
Can't Treat Both?" in J Med Ethics, 1989, 15 at 18.
|
| 24 |
E D Ward, "Dialysis or Death? Doctors Should Stop
Covering for an Inadequate Health Service" in J Med
Ethics, 1986, 12 at 61.
|
| 25 |
D V Johnstone, "Justice and Cost-Containment in
End Stage Renal Disease", 3 J of Contemp L and Policy
65 at 84 (1987).
|
| 26 |
M A Somerville, "Should the Grandparents Die?
- Allocation of Medical Resources with an Aging Population,
14 Law Med and Healthcare 3-4, 158.
|
| 27 |
Ibid, at 163. See also G J Agich and G E Bagley,
"The Price of Health" reviewed G Bevan in J
Med Ethics, 1988, 14 at 53.
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