1 / 55

Medical Ethics

Medical Ethics. Ethics. Ethics is the study of morality – careful and systematic reflection on and analysis of moral decisions and behaviour. Medical ethics definition. is a system of moral principles that apply values and judgments to the practice of medicine.

bbelcher
Télécharger la présentation

Medical Ethics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medical Ethics

  2. Ethics Ethics is the study of morality – careful and systematic reflection on and analysis of moral decisions and behaviour.

  3. Medical ethics definition is a system of moral principles that apply values and judgments to the practice of medicine.

  4. As a scholarly discipline, medical ethics encompasses its practical application in clinical settings as well as work on its history, philosophy, theology, and sociology.

  5. The study of medical ethics The study of medical ethics prepares medical students to recognize difficult situations and to deal with them in rational and principled manner.

  6. Values in medical ethics A common framework used in the analysis of medical ethics is the "four principles" approach There are four basic moral principles, which are to be judged and weighed against each other, with attention given to the scope of their application. The four principles of medical ethics are:-

  7. 1-Respect for autonomy(self-determination):  the patient has the right to refuse or choose his treatment. 2-Beneficence: a practitioner should act in the best interest of the patient.  

  8. 3-Non- maleficence: "first, do no harm” 4-Justice: concerns the distribution of scarce health resources, and the decision of who gets what treatment (fairness and equality).

  9. Other values which are sometimes discussed include: 1- Respect for persons the patient (and the person treating the patient) have the right to be treated with dignity. 2-Truthfulness and honesty the concept of informed consent .  

  10. Conflicts between autonomy and beneficence Autonomy can come into conflict with beneficence when patients disagree with recommendations that health care professionals believe are in the patient's best interest. When the patient's interests conflict with the patient's welfare, different societies settle the conflict in a wide range of manners.

  11. Western medicine generally defers to the wishes of a mentally competent patient to make his own decisions, even in cases where the medical team believes that he is not acting in his own best interests. However, many other societies prioritize beneficence over autonomy.

  12. On the other hand, autonomy and beneficence/non-maleficence may also overlap. For example, a breach of patients' autonomy may cause decreased confidence for medical services in the population and subsequently less willingness to seek help, which in turn may cause inability to perform beneficence.

  13. Beneficence is a task worthy of many to complete due to its difficulty to perform under extreme circumstances that are not correlated directly with individuals seeking euthanasia.

  14. The principles of autonomy and beneficence/non- maleficence may also be expanded to include effects on the relatives of patients or even the medical practitioners, the overall population and economic issues when making medical decisions.

  15. Medical ethics & professionalism From Hippocrates – the founder of medical ethics came the concept of medicine as a profession , whereby physicians make a public promise that they will place the interests of their patient above their own interests

  16. Medical ethics and human rights In recent times , medical ethics has been greatly influenced by human rights . In a pluralistic and multicultural world with many different moral traditions , the major international human rights agreements can provide a foundation for medical ethics that is acceptable across national and cultural boundaries.

  17. Medical ethics and low Medical ethics is closely related to law. In most countries there are laws that specify how physicians and nurses are required to deal with ethical issues in patient care and research .

  18. Medical ethics and low In addition , the medical licensing and regulatory officials in each country can punish physicians and nurses for ethical violations. But ethics and low are not identical.

  19. Medical ethics and low Ethics often prescribes higher standards of behaviour than the law , and occasionally ethics requires that physicians and nurses disobey laws that demand unethical behaviour.

  20. In making decisions , it is helpful to know what others physicians and nurses would do in similar situations.

  21. Compassion ,competence, and autonomy are not exclusive to medicine , however ,physicians are expected to exemplify them to a higher degree than other people , including members of many other professions.

  22. compassion Compassion , defined as understanding and concern for another person‘s distress . It is essential for the practice of medicine. In order to deal with the patient‘s problems , the must identify the symptoms that the patient is experiencing and their underlying causes and must want to help the patient achieve relief.

  23. competence A very higher degree of competence is both expected and required of physicians. A lack of competence can result in death and serious morbidity for patients. Physician undergo long training period to ensure competence ,but considering the rapid advance of medical knowledge . It is a continual challenge for them to maintain their competence.

  24. Autonomy Or self-determination , is the core value of medicine that has changed the most over the years. Individual physicians have traditionally enjoyed a high degree of clinical autonomy in deciding how to treat their patients.

  25. Autonomy At the same time , there has been wide spread acceptance by physicians worldwide of patient autonomy ,which means that patients should be the ultimate decision – makers in matters that affect themselves.

  26. Confidentiality The physician‘s duty to keep patient information confidential has been a cornerstone of medical ethics since the time of Hippocrates. Hippocrates Oath states : “what I may see or hear in the course of treatment or even out side of the treatment in regard to the life of man ,which on no account must spread abroad, I will keep to myself holding such

  27. Confidentiality things shameful to be spoken about.” The Oath , and some more recent versions , allow no exception to this duty of confidentiality . However , other codes rejects this absolutist approach to confidentiality.

  28. Confidentiality The WMA‘ International Code of Medical Ethics states : “It is ethical to disclose confidential information when the patient consents to it , or when there is a real and imminent threat or harm to the patient or to others and this threat can be only removed by a breach of confidentiality” that breaches of confidentiality are sometimes justified calls for clarification the very idea of confidentiality.

  29. Confidentiality In certain circumstances it is not unethical to disclose confidential information.

  30. Beginning -of- Life Issues Many of the most prominent issues in medical ethics relate to the beginning of human life. Each of them has been the subject of extensive analysis by medical associations , ethicists , and government advisory bodies and in many countries there are laws, regulations , and policies dealing with them.

  31. Contraception Although there is increasing international recognition of a woman‘s right to control her fertility , including the prevention of unwanted pregnancies , physicians still have to deal with different issues such as requests for contraceptives from minors and explaining the risk of different methods of contraception.

  32. Assisted reproduction For couples and individuals we cannot conceive naturally there are various techniques of assisted reproduction , such as artificial insemination , and in-vitrofertilization , and embryo transfer , widely available in major medical centers . Surrogate or substitute gestation is another alternative. None of those technique is unproblematic , either in individual cases or for public policies.

  33. Prenatal Genetic Screening Genetic tests are now available for determining whether an embryo or fetus is affected by Certain genetic abnormalities and whether It is male or female. Depending on the finding ,a decision can be made whether or not to proceed with pregnancy.

  34. Prenatal Genetic Screening Physicians need to determine when to offer such tests and how to explain the results to the patient.

  35. Abortion This has long been one of the most divisive issues in medical ethics ,both for physicians and for public authorities. The WMA Statement on Therapeutic Abortion acknowledges this diversity of opinion and belief and concludes that “This is a matter of individual conviction and conscience that must be respected”

  36. Severely compromised neonates Because of extreme pre-maturity or congenital abnormalities , some neonates have a very poor prognosis for survival. Difficult decisions often have to be made to attempt to prolong their lives or allow them to die.

  37. Research Issues These include the production of new embryos or the use of spare embryos (those not wanted for reproductive purposes ) to obtain stem cells for potential therapeutic application ,testing of new techniques for assisted reproduction, and experimentation of foetuses.

  38. End- of -life issues End of life issues range from attempts to prolong the lives of dying patients through highly experimental technologies, such as the implantation of animal organs , to efforts to terminate life prematurely through euthanasia and medically assisted suicide.

  39. End -of- life issues In between these extremes lay numerous issues regarding the initiation or withdrawing of potentially life-extending treatments , the care of terminally ill patients and the advisability and use of advance directives.

  40. Two issues deserve particular attention :- EuthanasiaandAssistance in suicide.

  41. Euthanasia Euthanasia means knowingly and intentionally performing an act that is clearly intended to end another person' life that includes the following elements :

  42. Euthanasia the subject is a competent ,informed person with an incurable illness who has voluntarily asked for his or her life to be ended ; the agent knows about the person’s condition

  43. Euthanasia and desire to die ,and commits the act with primary intention of ending the life of that person ; and the act is undertaken with compassion and without personal gain.

  44. Assistance in Suicide Assistance in suicide means knowingly and intentionally providing a person with the knowledge or means or both required to commit suicide , including counseling about lethal doses of drugs , prescribing such lethal doses or supplying the drugs.

  45. Euthanasia and assisted suicide are regarded as morally equivalent, although there is a clear practical distinction , and in some jurisdiction a legal distinction between them .

  46. Physicians are understandably unwilling to implement requests for euthanasia or assistance in suicide because these acts are illegal in most countries and are prohibited in most medical codes of ethics.

  47. This prohibition was part of Hippocratic Oath and has been emphatically restated by WMA in its Declaration on Euthanasia.

  48. Physicians , their colleagues and relationship with other health professionals • Physicians belong to a profession that has traditionally functioned in an extremely hierarchical fashion. * A cooperative model of decision – making has replaced the authoritarian model that was characteristic of traditional medical paternalism. * Teachers have an obligation to treat their students respectfully and to serve as good role models in dealing with patients.

  49. Physicians , their colleagues and relationship with other health professionals * Students concerned about ethical aspects of their education should have access to such mechanisms where they can raise concerns. * Reporting colleagues to disciplinary authority should normally be a last resort after other alternatives have been tried and found wanting. * Cooperation among physicians and other health team members is essential.

  50. Physicians , their colleagues and relationship with other health professionals * The weakening of medical paternalism has been accompanied by the disappearance of the belief that physicians “own” their patients. * Uncertainty and diverse viewpoints can rise to disagreement about the goals of care or the means of achieving those goals.

More Related