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Medical Ethics Board Review

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Medical Ethics Board Review. Robert S. Crausman, MD, MMS. Medical Ethics [vs. Professional ethics] ... Ethical dilemma is a predicament in which there is no ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Medical Ethics Board Review


1
Medical Ethics Board Review
  • Robert S. Crausman, MD, MMS

2
Medical Ethics vs. Professional ethics
  • Principals to guide physicians in their
    relationships with others
  • Ethical dilemma is a predicament in which there
    is no clear course to resolve the problem of
    conflicting moral principles
  • Dynamic environment/evolving field

3
Principles
  • Autonomy
  • Beneficience
  • Nonmaleficence
  • Justice

4
Autonomy
  • Right to self-determination
  • Requires decision making capacity
  • Lack should be proven not assumed
  • Competence legal determination
  • Liberty freedom to influence course of
    life/treatment

5
Preservation of Autonomy
  • Advance Directives
  • A document in which an individual either states
    preferences or designates decision maker
  • Living Will
  • Takes effect when terminally ill and lacking
    decision making capacity

6
Preserving Autonomy
  • Surrogate Decision Makers
  • Represents patients interest
  • Best identified before critical illness
  • In absence of specific advanced directives should
    use substituted judgement

7
Preservation of Autonomy
  • The primary responsibility of the physician is to
    serve the patients interest

8
The patient self determination act of 1990
  • At the time of admission information re the
    patients right to refuse care or create an
    advance directive must be dispensed

9
Informed Consent
  • Requirements
  • Decision making capacity
  • Volutariness
  • Reasonable person standard
  • Present all alternatives f/b recommendation
  • Respect refusal
  • All surgical and experimental procedures

10
Implied Consent
  • Invoked when true informed consent not possible
  • Emergency situations when harm would result
    without urgently needed intervention

11
Disclosure
  • Truth telling on part of physician is an integral
    part of patient autonomy

12
Paternalism
  • Justifiable if patient at risk of significant
    preventable harm, paternalistic action will
    prevent harm, benefits outweigh risks and the
    least autonomy-restrictive course of action is
    used

13
Confidentiality
  • Obligation of physician to maintain information
    in strict confidence
  • Exceptions if failure to release data to data to
    appropriate agencies may result in greater
    societal harm

14
Futility
  • Unilateral decision made on part of physician to
    withold or withdraw medical intervention based on
    predictable futile outcome
  • Physiologic futility
  • Medical futility none of last 100 cases like
    this

15
Beneficience
  • Obligation to preserve life, restore health,
    relieve suffering and maintain function
  • To do good
  • Nonabandonment obligation to provide ongoing
    care
  • Conflict of interest must not engage in
    activities that are not in patients best interest

16
Nonmaleficence
  • Do no harm, prevent harm and remove harm

17
Impaired Physician
  • Physicians have the obligation to report impaired
    behavior in colleagues

18
Principle of Double Effect
  • Act must be morally good
  • Actor intends good effect
  • Good effect outweighs bad effect
  • Bad effect not means to good effect

19
Justice
  • Allocation of medical resources must be fair and
    according to need
  • Physicians should not make decisions regarding
    individuals based upon societal needs

20
MD assisted suicide and euthanasia
  • Legally prohibited in the US except in Oregon
    which permits MD assisted suicide

21
DNR
  • DNR orders affect CPR only
  • Other therapies should not be influenced by DNR
    order
  • Should be reviewed frequently
  • Rationale should be in medical record

22
Withdrawing of Support
  • Brain death is not required
  • Same as not initiating
  • Does not conflict with basic principles

23
Persistent Vegetative State
  • Uncnsciousness/ loss of self awareness lasting
    more than weeks
  • Supreme court draws no distinction between
    artificial feeding, hydration vs. mechanical
    ventilation

24
Death
  • Irreversible cessation of circulatory and
    respiratory function
  • Irreversible cessation of all brain function
    (including brainstem)
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