Moulder, "Bioethical Decisionmaking Process"
Notable for giving more attention to stakeholders than to anything else
SOURCE FOR THE PROCEDURE
Moulder, Linda. "Ethical Decisionmaking Process." 1997. http://www.biology.ewu.edu/students/Courses/bio340/decisionmaking.html (10 Jun. 1999).
THE PROCEDURE ITSELF
- Context
- What is the bioethical decision to be made?
- Who must make the decision?
- What factual information is relevant?
- Stakeholders
- Who are the stakeholders?
- What values does each stakeholder have?
- What immediate priorities does each stakeholder have?
- Alternatives and tradeoffs
- What are the alternative courses of action?
- How would each stakeholder be affected by the alternatives?
- Solution
- What solution do you propose?
- What values do you have which cause you to choose this solution?
- How would you convince each stakeholder?
WALT'S CHECKLIST
The same checklist was applied to all procedures.
- This method is most useful when the DECISION-MAKER ...
- has high initial sensitivity to relevant ethical "features" [step 1]
- has keen insight into human motivation [step 2c]
- is skilled in causal or consequential reasoning [step 3b]
- This method is most useful in a SITUATION ...
- that will change little over time
- This method is most useful when STAKEHOLDERS ...
- share values [steps 2b, 4b and 4c]