Overview –Readings –Introduction to Ethical Foundations –Clarification of basic terms –Clarification of the historical context of western medical ethics.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NIGB NATIONAL INFORMATION GOVERNANCE BOARD Harry Cayton, Chair, National Information Governance Board.
Advertisements

Assessing Ethics in CbDs
BIOETHICS: THE SUBJECT, PURPOSE AND OBJECTIVES OF THE HEALTH CARE SYSTEM. BIOETHICS OF BIOMEDICAL EXPERIMENTS. INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTS ON BIOETHICS AND.
Frameworks for Moral Arguments
CRUZAN v. DIRECTOR, MISSOURI DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH U.S. SUPREME COURT 1990.
Medical Ethics Lecturer :Noha Alaggad
The principles In Medical Ethics Lecturer :Noha Alaggad
Introduction to basic principles
Telling Patients the Truth: A Case Study in Ethical Decision Making
Unit 2 Principles of Health and Social Care Practice
Ethical and Legal Implications of Practice Chapter 5.
Ethical Issues in Public Health
The Chaplain as Spiritual Guide in Ethics Consults 2006.
Medical Ethics Dr. Raid Jastania. Right and Wrong.
Values, Ethics, and Advocacy
Ethics in research involving human subjects
Ethical Issues of Elder Care. Objectives Apply the concept of decision-specific capacity to older adults. Apply the concept of decision-specific capacity.
Medical Decision Making Nuala Kenny SC, OC, MD, FRCP Department of Bioethics (post-rtd) Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS Ethics & Health Policy Advisor.
Autonomy: Respect for Persons, Decision-making Capacity, & Informed Consent Walter Limehouse MD MUSC Ethics Committee Chair.
1 HOW OLD IS TOO OLD? How old is too old? How sick is too sick? (How young is too young?)
SCHEN SCC-CSI MUSC Walter Limehouse MD MA MUSC Emergency Medicine.
Navigating Ethical Tensions in Global Health Practice Debjani Mukherjee, Ph.D. Director, Donnelley Ethics Program, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago.
What makes Clinical Research Ethical? Dr Enoka Corea Co-secretary, ERC Faculty of Medicine, Colombo.
Ethics and End-of-Life Care Part 2: Autonomy and Futility Michael Wassenaar, PhD February 9, 2012.
Always Clarify. Session Two-Part Two –3 Readings –3.1 Two contrasting world views –3.1.1 Christian approaches –3.2 Robert Orr’s method –3.3 Common secular.
New Uses for Advance Directives in Health Care ( And Other 2009 Changes in Virginia’s Health Care Decisions Act) Richard J. Bonnie University of Virginia.
Decision-Making Adam Burrows, MD Boston University Geriatrics Section Copyright Boston University Medical Center.
Public Health Ethics and Leadership: Getting it Right! Leslie E. Wolf, J.D., M.P.H. Georgia State University College of Law Center for Law, Health & Society.
The Ethics of Pandemic Influenza Planning and Response in Missouri Lea Brandt, OTD, MA, OTR/L MHPC OTA Program Director Clinical Assistant Professor School.
C C E E N N L L E E End-of-Life Nursing Education Consortium International Curriculum Ethical Issues and Cultural Considerations in Palliative Care.
A Conscience Sensitive Approach to Teaching Caring Attitudes.
Ethics Analysis in Clinical Medicine Eugene Bereza, MD CM, CCFP Director Biomedical Ethics Unit Faculty of Medicine McGill University.
The Culture of Healthcare
Chapter 10 by Kathleen Mastrian, Dee McGonigle, and Nedra Farcus
Ethics in pharmacy practice
Ethics and Clinical Ethics Committee ETHICS. Ethical Dilemma OCCURS IN SITUATIONS WHERE A CHOICE MUST BE MADE BETWEEN TWO OR MORE RELEVANT, BUT CONTRADICTORY.
Are There Limits to Patient Autonomy? Elizabeth Heitman, PhD Vanderbilt University Medical Center Center for Biomedical Ethics and Society Challenges in.
Basic Nursing: Foundations of Skills & Concepts Chapter 7 ETHICAL RESPONSIBILITIES.
1 AN INSTITUTIONAL POLICY ON “FUTILE” CARE ELEMENTS FOR SUCCESS.
Advance Care Planning Module 1
Professionalism/Customer Service in the Health Environment Unit 8 Ethical and Cultural Issues Related to Communication and Customer Service Lecture 8a.
ETHICAL ISSUES AND INFORMED CONSENT Juan M. Lozano, MD, MSc Department of Paediatrics and Clinical Epidemiology Unit School of Medicine, Javeriana University.
Ethics and Clinical Harm Reduction Frederick Rotgers, PsyD, ABPP Associate Professor of Psychology Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Melody Brown Hellsten, DNP, RN, PPCNP-BC, CHPPN INTRIGUING ETHICAL CHALLENGES IN PEDIATRIC ONCOLOGY NURSING.
Medical Ethics  A set of guidelines concerned with questions of right & wrong, of duty & obligation, of moral responsibility.  Ethical dilemma is a.
Ethical Principles and HIV / AIDS Care - some challenges Anthony Mullings DM (O&G) MPH UWI.
Ethics & decision-making Dr Barbara Hayes Palliative Care Physician Advance Care Planning Program Health decision dilemmas: Rights responsibilities and.
Table of Contents. Lessons 1. Reducing Liability Go Go 2. Ethics Go Go 3. Ethical Dilemmas Go Go.
Ethical and Bioethical Issues in Medicine
BIOETHICAL PRINCIPLES Beauchamp and Childress 2001;Gillon 1986
Legal & Ethical Issues in Dementia Care
Foundations of Practice
Chapter 2 Ethical and Legal Issues
PRINCIPLES OF ETHICS IN MEDICINE ETHICS IN MEDICINE ETM: 400 GROUP 1
of bird flu manages to mutate and spread between humans (IPRP, 2005).
Week 5: Ethical, Legal & Social Issues in Applied Genomics
Human Rights in Patient Care
Pennsylvania Health Care Worker Flu Immunization Campaign A Patient Safety & Employee Health Initiative Training Resources: Ethics Module Version 1.4.
Influenza Pandemic: A Model for Development of Administrative Policies and Procedures to Guide Preparedness for Influenza Pandemic Actions in Catholic.
Principles of Health Care Ethics
Ethical Considerations in the Health Care Environment
Ethical Decision Making in Health Care
Ethical considerations for better health
Ethics in Research.
Ethics and genetics Emily Parsonage ST3.
Chapter 13: Ethics and Law
Principlism This slide set is intended for inclusion in a lecture or other presentation.
Ethics and Clinical Ethics Committee
Introduction Nursing profession requires knowledge of ethics to guide performance. The nature of this profession necessitates ethical care more than routine.
Presentation transcript:

Overview –Readings –Introduction to Ethical Foundations –Clarification of basic terms –Clarification of the historical context of western medical ethics –Clarification of the current North American context

Readings Medical Ethics and the Place of Faith Medical Ethics and Secular Approaches

Introduction to Ethical Foundations Main take-away point of class

Clarify The Big Fish

Clarification of basic terms Bioethics Medical ethics Clinical ethics

Bioethics Broad term describing the study of ‘what’ constitutes ‘good/bad’ judgments and ‘right/wrong’ actions when faced with biological dilemmas

Medical Ethics Emphasis is the study of ethics applied to medicine and medical care

Clinical Ethics Subdivision of medical ethics Focus is on ethical issues surrounding a patient’s interface within medical community decision making complex i.e. patient-physician treatment decisions This is the primary area of our class

Clarification of historical of western medical ethics context Quiescent Period-the Hippocratic ethic Period of Principlism Period of Anti-principlism Period of Crisis Period of Social Utility

North American Context Varying expressions of Principlism Varying expressions social utility Lingering expressions of Christian ethic

Two contrasting worldviews –Judeo-Christianity (Abahamic Traditions in PC terms) –Darwinian Naturalism

Judeo-Christian Supernaturalism –Judeo-Christian Hippocratic Ethic –Christian Virtue Ethics

Darwinian Naturalism Principlism Social Contract

Principlism Beneficence Non-maleficence Autonomy Justice

Variation on Principlism Medical indication (medical norms) Patient Preference (autonomy) Quality of life (Beneficence/non maleficence) Contextual features (includes justice) Albert Jonson: Clinical Ethics

Social Contract Contracts made with voluntary consent to receive or give up benefits and burdens to its members, health care institutions and health care distributions must conform to the dictates of agree upon principles Equitable distribution of health care should be conceived in terms of justice Done under the ‘veil of ignorance’ Mini/max principle

The proper way to think abut health- care spending is to focus on the NET SOCIAL VALUE ADDED by health care, defined as: Net Social Gross Value The Opportunity Value Added = Added by - pp y Costs of that b th H lth y by the Health Health Care to Care for Society S t P ti t y System Patients Among these opportunity costs are: The education of our young Basic science and R&D The nation’s public infrastructure National security andthe safety of our warriors The proper way to think abut health-care spending is to focus on the NET SOCIAL VALUE ADDED by health care, defined as: Net social value Added by = Health System Gross Value Added by - Health Care to Patients The Opportunity Costs of that Care for Society Among these opportunity costs are: education of our young basic science R&D nation’s public infra-structure national security and defense David B. Reuben: Portland Providence Medical Center Grand Rounds Providence Nov. 16, 2011

A Matrix for Ethical Decision Making in a Pandemic Dr. John Tuohey An Example of Applied Synthesis of Principlism and Social Contract

Always Clarify

Robert Orr’s Method Framing the medico-ethics question Four elements for medical clarification Clarifying decision making agency Clarifying institutional level issues Operative norms and values Discussion Recommendations Follow-up Comments

Framing the Medico-ethics Question

Four elements for medical clarification Patient History Diagnosis Prognosis Treatment plan

Clarifying decision making agency Patient capacity Legal competency Surrogate agency

Clarifying institutional level issues Distinctives in policy and procedure Legal implications

Operative norms and values Primary agents Mitigating agents

Discussion

Recommendations

Follow-up and Comments

Ethics Exercise Interactive Exercise Orr’s Method