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. . . The national survey conducted by Louis Harris for a presidential on bioethics in 1982. . . found that 96 percent of Americans wanted to told if they had cancer, and 85 percent wanted a "realistic estimate" of long they had to live if their type of cancer "usually leads to death in than a year. " On the other hand, fewer than half the physicians surveyed they would either give a "straight statistical prognosis" (13 percent) or"say that you can't tell how long the patient might live, but stress that in cases people live no longer than a year" (28 percent) if the patient had "fully confirmed diagnosis of lung cancer in an advanced stage. " The's most recent important case involving informed consent,
George J. Annas (Thu,) studied this question.
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