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Islamic Traditions and Biomedical Ethics Highlights of Islamic Bioethics Conference at U of Michigan – Apr 2011. J Rusthoven July 2011. Highlights – Interdisciplinary Conference on Islamic Bioethics. Participants: Physicians, Nurses, Islamic Scholars, Imans, Jewish and Christian observers
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Islamic Traditions and Biomedical EthicsHighlights of Islamic Bioethics Conference at U of Michigan – Apr 2011 J Rusthoven July 2011
Highlights – Interdisciplinary Conference on Islamic Bioethics • Participants: Physicians, Nurses, Islamic Scholars, Imans, Jewish and Christian observers • Bioethical Discourse in the US – Howard Brody • What role should religion play in bioethics? • Should consider as lived experience, not static tradition; shaped by multiple cultural inputs • Religious vs Secular: terms are contested, in flux
Bioethical Discourse - Brody • John Rawls as exemplar of liberal view – individual rights • Justice as fairness – rights equally to all – need minimum basic moral principles via rationality and mutual disinterestedness • Religious views not welcomed in public square because risk causing disruption • All participating in public discourse leave comprehensive doctrines (private moralities) at the door • Later, considered advantages to sharing traditions but must go back to reason to maintain civility
Responses to Rawls • Martha Nussbaum • Accept diversity, encourage honesty, humility, and mutual respect • Exercise right to express own views in public • Habermas • allows more religious views but not for policy making • ‘institutional translational proviso’: requirement to connect religious reasons with secular ones – secular reasons have priority
Transplanting Bioethics into Different Cultures Raymond De Vries (U of M) • Ethical Ideas can be transplanted in three ways: • Adopted wholesale • Mold and Alter • Principles just begin the conversation • Compared missionary and bioethicist • Can be helpful or harmful • The Gospel is like the Belmont Report • Concern about Islam • looking too accommodating with principlism • should make more effort to develop own ethical framework
The Uneasy Relationship between Health Care and Religion in the USRobert Vischer, JD • In law, moving to professional ‘servicing’ the public • Trendaway from negative rights (don’t interfere; do no harm) toward positive rights (right to help others) • Trendtoward providing service even if against conscience - will continue to be difficult for Muslims to live out their own consciences
How Sunnis Respond to Bioethical DilemmasShaykh Musa Furber (Abu Dabbi, UAE) • All principles can be distilled to: warding off harm – focus should be on religious person and his Lord • Jurist/Judge – make judgments on various issues with much input from physicians – designated by local political authority • Mufti – the one making a judgment – counsels individuals on practical bioethical matters • Mushti– the one asking for the judgment • Figh– the body of prior judgments and ruling used for future rulings • Figh Council – non-binding, recommend as guidance
Recommended Research Method • Gain understanding of issue, use local specialists • Gather evidence and opinion • Qur’an, prophetic narratives, scholarly consensus, statements of Companion and successor, classical figh literature, ruling from figh councils, etc.) • if no precedent found, fall back on starting point of autonomy, beneficence, justice
Recommended Research Method • Fatwa process • Petitioner describes problem or event • Mufti identified known legal issue similar to the event • Mufti checks if precondition, essential elements have been included • Mufti look at petitioner’s circumstanced to ensure they apply • Ruling that realizes the petitioner’s needs • Rulings non-binding; can get second Mufti opinion
Role of Shiite Iman in Bioethical ConsultationIman Hassan al-Qazwini • Islam very diverse; denominations within Sunni and Shia groups • Shiite community ~ 20% of Muslims; largest communities in US in LA and Detroit areas • All forms of human life before and after birth of equal value • No justification of termination of life so no forms of abortion permitted • Definite predestination = terminal cancer – all in hands of God • Indefinite = patient has role and responsibility in deciding health
Shiite Perspective on Bioethical Issues (majority of scholars) • Must make every effort to save a life, even just extending hours or days • Don’t know if unconscious patient is spiritually suffering so must keep on respirator to allow any lingering spiritual struggle • No concept of ‘brain death’ – all signs of life must cease before officially dead – tremendous pressure from ICU teams • Judgment (Fatwa) of jurist is binding – Iman is bioethical leader and reference point on where community stands on bioethical issues
Q & A • Q: Local Muslim MD – Why is there no ruling in Islam on female circumcision? • A: Sunni scholar - There is but in Arabic - go learn Arabic! – Comment: Muslims need to be more informed about Qur’an and other Muslims authoritative texts • Q: What is Sunni position on D/C respirator? • A: Can D/C if no hope (not all Sunni scholars agree)
Q & A • Dilemma: In Islam, taught to abide by law of the land – brain dead = dead? • Iman Ans:can compromise with issues of state law vs Islamic law • Shiite Organ donation: • Can donate only internal organs when alive (e.g., not eyes) • Can’t donate essential organ (heart) while alive • Sunni scholar comments: similar with Sunni but no allowance for payment for donation • Q: Muftis don’t always give informed advice • A: Get second opinion
Not Quite Dead: Why Egyptian Physicians Contest the ‘Universal’ Criteria of ‘Brain Death’Sherine Hamdy • Increased rate in renal failure, thought due to industrial pollution, causing great need for renal transplants • Problem with cadaveric procurement of kidneys • Islamic MDs blocking nat’l legislation on brain death
Role of Muslim Physician in Bioethics Discourse: A Risk/Benefit Analysis Medicine Islamic Ethics Life: Before birth, after birth, after death Improve quality of life – minimize risk to life End-of-this-life care Risk for Islamic MD = concern for sin • Life: Before and after birth • Improve quality of life – extend length of life • End-of-life care • Risk in medicine = harm
Islamic Applied Ethics and the Future ApproachTariq Ramadan • In each generation, God will provide for experts to re-interpret written revelation in context of the day – no new revelation • Questions whether primary focus of moral knowledge should be scriptural sources • Text-context always linked • Gaps in written text where believer must sort out problem • Need to accept interpretative diversity in Islam (e.g., 14 diff. opinions on what texts say about euthanasia) • Current state of Islamic discourse in bioethics: segregation of Islam and science – what is ‘Islamic’ in Islamic science? • Needs to be reconciliation between sciences and Islamic ethics
Islamic Applied Ethics and the Future ApproachTariq Ramadan • Islamic mission: reform self and the world • Some Suffi say just be interested in renewing self and protect self from the world • Two kinds of reform: Adaptationalvs Transformational • Scholars of the context should be the authorities of the discipline such as bioethics. But no consensus on consensus • In the West, perhaps better opportunity to address contemporary challenges than in other parts of the world
CaseNajah Bazzy, Nurse specialist in cultural diversity (One parent Shiite, on Sunni) • 35 y/o Muslim male with brain damage from stroke • Wife becomes uncommunicative – primary extended family killed in Iraq • Six young children unable to discuss issues of brain death • Brain dead for remaining family means only brain dead • Shiite MD in charge – uncomfortable signing off to Sunni MD who felt should D/C respirator (felt soul would be in peril if signed off) • Transcultural nurse specialist asked for scholarly review
Case (con’t) • Shiite scholar felt soul could be on journey and only God could decide time of death • Final opinion: stopping respirator would be murder • Second Shiite scholar suggested make funeral arrangements and stop ventilator – speaker suggestion: focus on patient and family desires • Stressed helping family have peace and forgive selves for not saving the life of their loved one
What Has Religion to Do With Practice of Medicine?Farr Curlin (U of Chicago) • Motivated to care for the sick and have sense of what human flourishing entails • Clinicians must act as practical moral philosophers • False sense that can keep separate private and professional parts of life (private vs professional moral beliefs) • Need to consider more public awareness of how practice affected by religion
Is There an Islamic Bioethics?Abdul Azziz Sachedina (Shiite) • Need to empower Muslim caregivers to think through bioethical issues from Islamic hermeneutic – more reliance on own conscience • Encourages interfaith cooperation • Do not harm connects all human beings • Muslims can’t live in isolation anymore (cites David Novak’s appeal to covenant) • Need to standardize responses in Islamic community (? Islamic Council)
Q & A • Furber: is each Muslim his own final judge in democratic society? • Ans: Increase exchange of knowledge and views in each community – for Sunnis, each fatwa not binding but discourages fatwa shopping • Ramadan: primary task of Muslim is to be a witness and example, not to convert – concerned many writings not used or known that may help current issues
Different Cultures – One World Eds. H. Jochemsen and J. van de Stoep (Amsterdam: Rozenberg, 2010) Dialogue between Christians and Muslims about Globalizing Technology
Controversies in Islamic Law and Ethics – Sherwin Jackson • Four Historical Stages • Moral Objectivism • Reading nature objectively with help of written revelation • Currently movement back to this but acknowledging plurality of Muslim views • Theistic Objectivism (mainly Sunni tradition) • Moral judgments originate in us, not created order – no objective moral index – moral judgments are products of our culture, traditions, upbringing • Traditionalist • Situation-dependent – some situations may only need reason, intuition, or ‘common sense’ rather than revelation • Modernity/Postmodernity • Morality by consensus of informed reasonable persons