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Responsibility to Care: The Doctors’ Call to End War

Responsibility to Care: The Doctors’ Call to End War. Mary-Wynne Ashford, MD, Ph.D Peace Through Health Conference McMaster University May 6, 2005. War is the deliberate use of suffering, injury, deprivation and death for political gain. Doctors’ Call to End War. Not a pacifist stance

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Responsibility to Care: The Doctors’ Call to End War

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  1. Responsibility to Care:The Doctors’ Call to End War Mary-Wynne Ashford, MD, Ph.D Peace Through Health Conference McMaster University May 6, 2005

  2. War is the deliberate use of suffering, injury, deprivation and death for political gain

  3. Doctors’ Call to End War • Not a pacifist stance • Based on public health consequences of contemporary war • Scale of devastation and human suffering • Long term effects • Untenable use of political power

  4. Rwanda

  5. Vietnam

  6. Hiroshima and Nagasaki

  7. Hiroshima

  8. Project: r2care.org Web based resource using expert papers: • Analysis of War using Medical Paradigm • Application of Medical Ethics and Values • Medical Action to Prevent War Toolkit for advocacy

  9. Medical Analysis of War Epidemiology • Incidence • Prevalence • Morbidity • Mortality

  10. Etiology -Immediate causes -Intermediate causes -Root causes or contributing factors

  11. Diagnosis • History • Weapons • Signs and symptoms

  12. Treatment • Responding to suffering and injuries • Addressing social determinants • Addressing global root causes

  13. Prognosis based on weaponry • Nuclear • Biological • Chemical • Conventional • Destruction of civil infrastructure Prognosis based on political context

  14. Prevention • Primary • Secondary • Tertiary

  15. Rehabilitation • Individual • Social • Global

  16. Case Studies A. Specific war zones - report by physicians using medical paradigm B. Successful campaigns -International Campaign to Ban Landmines C. Recommendations

  17. Medical Ethics and Values Above all do no harm: • Least damaging intervention first • Benefit must be greater than harm • Refuse to support practices that violate basic human rights

  18. Reasonable likelihood of success • Involve patient, family, community and society • Early action • Follow up and rehabilitation planned at outset

  19. Responsibility to CareValues • Each life is of equal value • Morally wrong to cause suffering and death • Morally wrong to starve people • Morally wrong to destroy the environment for political gain • Political conflicts have political solutions

  20. Responsibility to CareValues • Not universally supported • Not limited to physicians or even to health care workers • Values rather than code of ethics • May or may not be based in religious faith

  21. Doctor’s Role • To prevent or ease suffering and to prevent death • Duty to treat all who are suffering: -combatants or non-combatants -enemy or ally

  22. Responsibility to Care May reflect personal values such as: • Inner sense of duty to serve • Source of meaning of life • Extending circles of compassion to include humanity and the earth • Sense of being called

  23. Medical Action to Prevent War Activist Kit • Writing papers for web site • Advocacy and information • Skills building: speaking and media • Organizational help • Projects to join • Links to organizations

  24. “… on this earth there are pestilences and there are victims, and it’s up to us in so far as possible, not to join forces with the pestilences.”Albert Camus, “The Plague”.

  25. Responsibility to Care • Mary-Wynne Ashford MD, Ph.D. • mashford@uvic.ca • 250 479 9189

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