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Ethics in Family Medicine. Nita Arisanti Department of Public Health . Learning objectives. Describe the principles of medical ethics Understand the implementation of medical ethics in family medicine cases Describe the ethical issues in several cases: Confidentiality Consent
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Ethics in Family Medicine Nita Arisanti Department of Public Health
Learning objectives • Describe the principles of medical ethics • Understand the implementation of medical ethics in family medicine cases • Describe the ethical issues in several cases: • Confidentiality • Consent • Non-compliant patient
Ethics is an understanding of the nature of conflicts arising from moral imperatives and how best we may deal with them • Ethics does NOT decide what is morally right or wrong; rather it considers how we should act best in the light of our duties and obligations as moral agents.
Medical Ethics • Medical ethics is the discipline of evaluating the merits, risks, and social concerns of activities in the field of medicine.
THE PRINCIPLES IN MEDICAL ETHICS • The Principle of Non-Maleficence • The Principle of Beneficence • The Principle of Autonomy • The Principle of Veracity • The Principle of Confidentiality(or Fidelity) • The Principle of Social Responsibility and Justice
The Principle of Non-Maleficence • first do no harm • sanctity of life • calculated risk or risk benefit
The Principle of Beneficence • do only that which benefits the patient • patient’s welfare as the first consideration • care consideration competence
The Principle of Autonomy • right to information and self determination • free and informed consent • free will and accord - intentional participation in treatment • respect and dignity maintained
The Principle of Veracity • Truth telling • Obligation to full and honest disclosure
The Principle of Confidentiality • Based on loyalty and trust • Maintain the confidentiality of all personal, medical and treatment information • Information to be revealed with consent and for the benefit of the patient • Except when ethically and legally required • Disclosure should not be beyond what is required
The Principle of Justice and Social Responsibility • Actions are consistent, accountable and transparent • not to discriminate on age, sex, religion, race, position or rank • greater good of society • respect of the Law • equity and distribution of burden & benefits
Components of Medical Ethics • The Physician -- Patient Relationship • The Physician -- Physician Relationship • The relationship of the Physician to the System of Healthcare • The Relationship of the Physician to Society
Medical Research Medical Students Political Upheaval, War CME, CPD Natural Disasters Medical Insurance Managed Care Doctor’s Employer Other Doctors International Community Hospital Paramedics Doctor’s Employee National Community Health Promotion Disease Diagnosis Laboratories Clinic Management DOCTOR PATIENT Press, Media Doctor’s Family Pharmaceutical Industry Disease Prevention Therapy Public Health Alternative Medicine Practice Management Patients’ Work, Employer Patients’ Family, Culture, Religion Patient Organisation MDO Medical Council Medical Charities Government Bodies The LAW THE MEDICAL ECOSYSTEM - Enlarging Circle of Influence
Confidentiality • The principle of medical confidentiality-that doctors must keep their patients' secrets-is one of the most venerable moral obligations of medical ethics.
The Hippocratic Oath enjoins: "Whatever, in connection with my professional practice, or not in connection with it, I see or hear, in the life of men, which ought not to be spoken of abroad, I will not divulge, as reckoning that all such should be kept secret."
What is "medical confidentiality"? Essentially medical confidentiality is the respecting of other people's secrets Confidentiality is important as a way to encourage patients to be frank
people's better health, welfare, the general good, and overall happiness are more likely to be attained if doctors are fully informed by their patients, and this is more likely if doctors undertake not to disclose their patients' secrets.
Case • Patient requests a statement certifying that he or she is fit to return to work • Insurance company requests for a patient’s condition • Teenage patient seeking abortion and contraceptive advice • Demented elderly patient
The General Medical Council (GMC)’s lists the following legitimate exceptions: (a) when the patient "or his legal adviser" gives written and valid consent; (b) when other doctors or other health care professionals are participating in the patient's care;
c) when the doctor believes that a close relative or friend should know about the patient's health but it is medically undesirable to seek the patient's consent; (d) exceptionally when the doctor believes that disclosure to a third party other than a relative would be in the "best interests of the patient" & when the patient has rejected "every reasonable effort to persuade";
(e) when there are statutory requirements to disclose information; (f) when a judge or equivalent legal authority directs a doctor to disclose confidential medical information;
(g) (rarely) when the public interest overrides the duty of confidentiality "such as for example investigation by the police of a grave or very serious crime"; and (h) for the purposes of medical research approved by a "recognised ethical committee."
In general, patient confidentiality can be breached for three broad reasons • avoiding harm to others • benefiting the patient • public health reporting
Consent • The principle’s basic mandate is that a physician must obtain the free and informed consent of a patient or of the surrogate before medical treatment is provided
Exceptions… Exceptions to the General Rule of Disclosure • Patient is unconscious or otherwise incapable of consenting (Emergency treatment) • Harm from failure to treat is imminent • Outweighs any harm threatened by proposed treatment • Therapeutic Privilege • Risk disclosure poses such a threat of detriment to a patient as to become unfeasible or contraindicated from a medical point of view • Does not accept the paternalistic notion that the physician may remain silent because divulgence might prompt the patient to forego therapy the doctor believes the patient must receive
The information includes • The nature of the patient’s condition • Purpose of the treatment • The potential benefit • The foreseeable risks and discomfort • The available alternatives • Cost
Informed consent for Incompetent adults: • Obtain from surrogate Case: what, however should one do when patient’s mental capacities are impaired but present to some degree?
Informed consent for children • Children Unable to Participate in decision making: From new-born period to early childhood. Parents are viewed as their surrogate decision makers
A Hypothetical Case Mrs. H • 83 year old Hispanic female • Alert and oriented • Terminal advanced COPD • Family agrees to hospice care for patient provided: • Patient not be told she is dying and on hospice • Hospice staff remove name badges when visiting • Hospice staff not tell patient why they have come to see her Question: • Does this violate the concept of informed consent?
A Hypothetical Case • During the initial visit by hospice staff: • Patient is given hospice papers and signs them without reading them • Patient is told by family to sign papers without reading them, which she does • Family member signs papers for patient without the patient even knowing this was done Question: • Which of these scenarios, if any, violate the concept of informed consent?
The non compliant patient • Patient choose not to comply with the physician’s recommendations
Case • Consider a patient who refuses to stay in the hospital • Patient does not fill the prescription that the doctor writes
The non compliant patient • Patient choose not to comply with the physician’s recommendations • Mutually acceptable alternative treatments are often available