Dual Loyalty and Health Professionals Teaching Law and Health: Courses on Law, Human Rights and Patient Care LAHI Workshop Skopje, Macedonia Robert S.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ethical Considerations in Home Visiting
Advertisements

Human Rights Grave Violations
Defining a Moral Problem Samantha Mei-che Pang RN, PhD School of Nursing The Hong Kong Polytechnic University.
Domestication and Implementation Package B The duty to prevent torture and other ill treatment © The Article 5 Initiative, 2013.
Dual Loyalty (DL) of Healthcare Professionals Zeev Wiener, MD.
Bledsoe et al., Paramedic Care Principles & Practice Volume 1: Introduction © 2006 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Chapter 7 Ethics in.
Confidentiality and HIPAA
When the health care professional has duties both to the person being treated or evaluated and to an authority such as a military command.
Medical Ethics Lecturer :Noha Alaggad
ICS 417: The ethics of ICT 4.2 The Ethics of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) in Business by Simon Rogerson IMIS Journal May 1998.
© 2006 Prohibition of Torture Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Austria.
Professional independence of health care workers in prison Jörg Pont, Vienna Bucharest
ACCOUNTING ETHICS Lect. Victor-Octavian Müller, Ph.D.
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم. THE TITLE “INTRODUCTION”
Code of Ethics – Discussion Question
Delmar Learning Copyright © 2003 Delmar Learning, a Thomson Learning company Nursing Leadership & Management Patricia Kelly-Heidenthal
Outline Definition of ethics Definition of nursing ethics Professional values Code of nursing ethics Legal aspects of nursing practice Illegal aspects.
Presentation Title Presentation Subtitle. Lecture outlines 1. Ethics 2. Morals 3. Law 4. Advanced Directives.
Year 11 R and S Ethics Great Ethical Thinkers. Codes of Ethics in Society.
1 Consent for treatment A summary guide for health practitioners about obtaining consent for treatment Bridie Woolnough Resolution Officer Health Care.
Human Subject Research Ethics
Internal Auditing and Outsourcing
Palestine Council of Health Code of Professional Conduct.
Concepts, Principles and Legal Framework Presentation by: Dr. Joseph Foumbi Consultant.
Medical Ethics By Shauna O’Sullivan.
1 Ethics For the Employee Benefits Agent.  Ethics – defined as a principle of right or good conduct; a system of moral principles or values; the rules.
Respect and Advocacy Sabato A. Stile M.D.. Worldwide, Complex, Public Health Problem affects people from all demographic and social groups and economic.
KNR 273: Ethics. What are ethics?  Statements of what is right or wrong, which usually are presented as systems of valued behaviors & beliefs  Serve.
“What’s Ethics Got To Do With It” Presentation to the Canberra Evaluation Forum Gary Kent Head Governance Australian Institute of Health and Welfare.
Seminar on Migration Legislation Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Guatemala 15 – 16 February 2007.
Mental Health Policy, Human Rights & the Law Mental Disability Advocacy Program Open Society Institute Camilla Parker October 2004.
Ethics and the Keys to Happiness Anchorage School District Counselor’s December Meeting December 12, 2008 Valerie Anne Demming Ph.D. L.P.C.
Research Profession and Practice ETHICS IN ADVANCED PREHOSPITAL CARE.
Ethics in pharmacy practice
Moral Issues In Policing. Moral Issues in Policing Should police be held to the same or higher standards than other members of society? – Courage? – Fairness?
1 ETHICS. 2 ETHICS AND PROFESSIONAL BEHAVIOR Ethics: Standards of conduct for a profession Some issues cannot be handled by codes alone Courts may decide.
 the study of the rightness or wrongness of human conduct.  In any situation involving two or more individuals, values may come into conflict and ethical.
Tuberculosis and the Ethics of Shared Responsibility Ross E.G. Upshur, BA(HONS), MA, MD, MSc, CCFP, FRCPC Canada Research Chair in Primary Care Research.
Dr Raj.  Medical ethics and Professionalism  Basics of History Taking  Recording the vital parameters  Musculoskeletal Examination.
1. Ethics of Nursing Ethics includes values, codes, and principles that govern decisions in nursing practice and relationships Nursing Ethics is the discipline.
Chapter 24 Ethical Obligations and Accountability Fundamentals of Nursing: Standards & Practices, 2E.
Medical Ethics  A set of guidelines concerned with questions of right & wrong, of duty & obligation, of moral responsibility.  Ethical dilemma is a.
ETHICAL ISSUES IN HEALTH AND NURSING PRACTICE Present by: Dr.Amira Yahia.
Research Profession and Practice ETHICS IN ADVANCED PREHOSPITAL CARE.
Bledsoe et al., Essentials of Paramedic Care: Division 1 © 2007 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Division 1 Introduction to Advanced Prehospital.
Ethical consideration in research Before you move any further look at the ethics ……!
Domain of Nursing The specific domain of nursing is – People’s unique responses to and experience of health, illness, frailty, disability and health-related.
Chapter 4 Ethical Standards. Introduction Limits to what law, regulations, and accrediting standards and requirements can govern In the absence of law,
Ethics: Guides for Professional Engagement
Code of Ethics for the Physical Therapist (APTA)
Foundations of Practice
The Importance of Ethical and Human Rights Issues in Global Health
Chapter 2 Ethical and Legal Issues
Chapter 7 Ethics in Advanced Prehospital Care
Human Rights in Patient Care
Medical personnel in places of detention: Ethical dilemmas Dual loyalty International standards
The NICE Citizens Council and the role of social value judgements
From Exam Room to Courtroom
Medical Law and Ethics Chapter 1
بنام خداوند جان و خرد كزين برتر انديشه بر نگذرد
Ethical Principles of Psychologists and Code of Conduct
ACCOUNTING ETHICS Conf.univ.dr. Victor-Octavian Müller.
Chapter 4 Dental Ethics.
ACCOUNTING ETHICS Conf.univ.dr. Victor-Octavian Müller.
Legal and Ethical Aspects in Clinical Practice
ACCOUNTING ETHICS Conf.univ.dr. Victor-Octavian Müller.
ACCOUNTING ETHICS Conf.univ.dr. Victor-Octavian Müller.
ACCOUNTING ETHICS Lect. Victor-Octavian Müller, Ph.D.
Ethical and Bioethical Issues in Nursing and Health Care
Presentation transcript:

Dual Loyalty and Health Professionals Teaching Law and Health: Courses on Law, Human Rights and Patient Care LAHI Workshop Skopje, Macedonia Robert S. Lawrence Chair, PHR Board of Directors Professor, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore MD, USA May 20, 2010

The foundational ideal of health practice: fidelity to patients May 20, 2010 “The health of my patient will be my first consideration.” WMA Declaration of Geneva

A sobering history of lack of fidelity Nazi doctors performed experiments on concentration camp inmates Military doctors in Chile and elsewhere participated in torture Soviet psychiatrists hospitalized dissidents These are extreme cases, but are they aberrations? May 20, 2010

The concept of dual loyalty Dual loyalty exists when a health professional has simultaneous obligations to a patient and to a third party – often referred to as a role conflict Usually third party is state, but can be employer, HMO, other Often pressures on the health professional to subordinate patient interests to those of state May 20, 2010

The concept of dual loyalty Duties to third parties usually thought to serve some social interest Resolution of these role conflicts rarely considered in medical ethics – masked by Hippocratic idea: “The health of my patient shall be my first consideration”

Dual loyalty and social interests In many instances social interests legitimate and can justifiably prevail. – Protecting a third party from harm – Gaining information to obtain social benefits – Public health needs Other social interests can be problematic – Efficient management of institutions, e.g., prisons – National security – Reinforcement of social values about women, minority groups – Perpetuation of inequitable health policies – Winning at all costs in sports

But increasingly dual loyalty implicates human rights Recent experience shows that dual loyalty is often associated with violations of human rights A product of states’ increasing use of health professionals to achieve their purposes In these cases the health professional becomes an instrument by which the violation takes place Sometimes health professionals identify with the state Exacerbated by employment contracts, closed institutions, institutionalized discrimination Violations of dual loyalty may even be unconscious May 20, 2010

Dual loyalty and human rights Special concerns when the conflict compromises patient interest to favor state practices and policies that violate human rights – Participation in infliction of harm: torture, death penalty, corporal punishment – Compromised medical judgment, e.g., report omits evidence of torture, allegiance to state in refugee cases – Inappropriate medical procedures, e.g., physician performs forced sterilization, virginity examination – Lower quality of care: Physician limits or denies care to conform to institutionalized discrimination or lack of health programs for disadvantaged groups. – Withholding medically relevant information, e.g. reproductive health.

Traditional model from ethics Relies on four principles -- beneficence, autonomy, non-maleficence, justice Clinician is supposed to examine how these principles apply to a particular situation, weighing the power of each

Limits to traditional model in resolving cases of dual loyalty: substance Model does not say what weight to give to competing principles, how to resolve them, and what role human rights play in balancing interests Gives little attention to the role of the state as an actor in resolving conflicts

Limits to the traditional model in resolving cases of dual loyalty: process Assumes that the clinician has all the information needed to make a good decision Assumes that the clinician has competence to weigh the competing interests Assumes that no outside pressures exist to affect decision

An alternative, human rights framework Substantively based explicitly on International human rights law International humanitarian law (laws of war) – Theory is that health personnel should not be instruments by which state commits human rights violations or further such violations Procedurally, clinician does not balance principles but strives to follow human rights standards Mechanisms to protect clinician independence must be in place

Human rights approach Based on principle of human dignity, and reflected in Universal Declaration of Human Rights and positive law. International Dual Loyalty Working Group approach: prohibit advancing state interests at the expense of internationally-recognized human rights Torture/cruel treatment absolutely prohibited under all circumstances

The Death of Anti-Apartheid Activist Steve Biko in Custody – Physicians failed to treat injuries that became fatal Q: In terms of the Hippocratic Oath, are not the interests of your patients paramount? Physician: Yes Q: But in this instance they were subordinated to the interests of the security police? Physician: Yes May 20, 2010

Interrogation and Health Professionals at Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo Health personnel failed to report to higher authorities evidence of torture they found in medical examinations Doctors shared medical data with interrogators Death certificates may have contained misstatements Psychologist designed techniques amounting to torture including humiliation, sleep deprivation, isolation, inducement of fear Physicians are not provided training or guidance to address their role in such situations May 20, 2010

Conduct of Iraqi physicians Most reported their motivation was fear of reprisal including imprisonment or execution Iraqi Medical Ass’n was part of government, had no power to protect its members May 20, 2010

Conduct of Iraqi physicians under Saddam Hussein PHR survey of 98 physicians is southern Iraq in 2003 reported that physicians performed nontherapeutic ear amputations Also falsification of medical- legal reports, release of medical records to state officials 2-7% of respondents acknowledged participating in these violations of fidelity to their patients May 20, 2010

The Vast Scope of the Problem – One We Cannot Ignore 1.Inflicting harm on patients at behest of the state 2.Subordination of judgment to state interests 3.Limiting medical treatment to effect state policy: discrimination 4.Breaches of confidentiality that violate human rights 5.Performing evaluations in a manner that violates allegiance to patient 6.Remaining silent in the face of violations May 20, 2010

1. Inflicting harm on patients at behest of the state Torture (many countries) Amputation (Afghanistan, Iraq) Death penalty (USA) Virginity examinations (Turkey, elsewhere) Female genital cutting (many countries) Forced sterilization (many countries) May 20, 2010

2. Subordination of judgment to state interests Failure to report evidence of torture (Turkey, USA) Psychiatric label placed on political dissidents (Soviet Union, China, USA) National security and reporting of radiation-related illnesses (Soviet Union, USA) Special triage rules in the military Skewing of refugee evaluations (Germany) Deference to police in hospital discharge May 20, 2010

3. Limiting medical treatment to effect state policy: discrimination Adhering to rules/practices that discriminate against racial, ethnic or religious groups in availability of treatment. Can be unconscious (evidence from USA) Denial of appropriate health interventions to women – Denial of care for reproductive health – Refusal to provide information May 20, 2010

3. Limiting medical treatment in order to effect state policy: other circumstances Rules of military triage Denial of appropriate care to prisoners, detainees and institutionalized people Denial of care for political reasons Denial of care in armed conflicts Denial of appropriate care to immigrants May 20, 2010

3. Limiting medical treatment in order to effect state policy: inequity in health Tailoring interventions to inequities in resources available Developing dual standards of care Denial of available interventions for reason of state policy (ARV’s in South Africa to prevent vertical transmission) May 20, 2010

4. Breaches of confidentiality that violate human rights Disclosure of information to police on persons arrested Prisons Disclosure of results of drug tests of pregnant women to police (USA) Note legitimacy of certain breaches of confidentiality -- where harms to others exist, public health needs May 20, 2010

5. Performing evaluations in a manner that facilitates violations of human rights Prison searches Forensic assessments – degrading (rape assessments) – failure to disclose purpose of exam Pre-employment examinations that result in discrimination May 20, 2010

6. Silence in the face of human rights abuses against individuals in their care Abu Ghraib: doctors knew of abuses, but said nothing South Africa: “This is a question that must not be put to me, it must be put to my department, because I merely follow instructions.” (Neil Agget Inquest, District Surgeon, South Africa) May 20, 2010

Summing up the problem Problems frequently arise in clinical practice, especially with stigmatized and vulnerable populations and in closed institutions Unconscious biases can come into play – allegiance to state objectives rather than allegiance to patient Employment arrangements tend to exacerbate the problem Few protections for those who seek to uphold ethical obligations May 20, 2010

What do ethical codes have to say about the problem? Some prohibitions on extreme conduct, e.g., participation in torture, capital punishment Even those codes have major gaps regarding passive participation, obligations to report And no consideration of obligations in the context of unjust social practices – Discrimination – Inequity in health services May 20, 2010

Nor are dual loyalty and human rights addressed in health professional training Ethics education tends to focus on the dyadic relationship; role of state not prominent Emphasis on principles of autonomy and beneficence Although principle of justice and equal treatment come into play, structural dimensions are rarely considered May 20, 2010

A Response: International Dual Loyalty Working Group Organized by Physicians for Human Rights and University of Cape Town Health Sciences Faculty Consisted of bioethicists, academic physicians, human rights experts, practitioners, member of TRC Countries represented included Chile, Germany, India, Israel, Netherlands, Palestinian Authority, Pakistan, Russia, South Africa, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States. May 20, 2010

Organizations Represented – World Medical Association – International Council of Nurses – Council of International Organizations in the Medical Sciences – British Medical Association – International Federation of Health and Human Rights Organizations – Amnesty International – International Committee of the Red Cross May 20, 2010

Questions Addressed What is the scope and extent of the problem – in what situations do health professionals face demands that violate human rights? – Civil and political rights – Economic, social and cultural rights What guidelines exist to guide professional conduct? What pressures exist to constrain conduct and what protections and supports exist to support health professionals faced with these pressures? What remedies are possible? May 20, 2010

Proposed Guidelines on Dual Loyalty and Human Rights Set of general guidelines Five specialized guidelines: – prisons – military – refugees/immigrants – forensic – workplace May 20, 2010

General Guidelines Health professionals to become conversant with HR for clinical practice through training Develop skills to identify situations of dual loyalty; recognize how state and other third parties can misuse skills Place protection of patient’s human rights first; affirmatively resist demands by state to subordinate patient rights to state interests, including passive participation. Exceptions only within a framework established by standard- setting authority competent to define human rights obligations; any departure should be disclosed to the patient Need for support and solidarity May 20, 2010

Solutions Provide guidance to help health professionals identify situations where – They may become agents of state – They are complicit in breaches by the state – Provide special guidance in specialized settings Design institutional mechanisms that – Restructure professional roles to protect them – Provide support for health professionals in dual loyalty situations – Hold health professionals accountable May 20, 2010

Institutional Mechanisms Purpose: to avoid being placed in the DL conflict to help address DL conflict effectively once it arises Agencies, organizations, social and administrative structures and functions Training, regulation, contracts, awareness raising May 20, 2010

Institutional Mechanisms Employment relationships structured to avoid role conflicts and reduce interference with professional independence Administrative and legal arrangements to preserve professional independence e.g., ombudsmen, independent exams, Patient Rights Charter, disciplinary action, whistleblower protection Ethos of peer review, professional credibility, support and inclusiveness May 20, 2010

Human rights and health: Institutional Supports Re-structure the relationship of the health professional to the state in a manner that will protect independence Support health professionals in complying with their ethical and human rights obligations in the face of state demands Hold professionals accountable for violations May 20, 2010