Title: SCCD HM 546: Introduction to Ethics and Professionalism
1SCCD HM 546 Introduction to Ethics and
Professionalism
8/05
- Howard Brody, MD, PhD
- Center for Ethics Humanities and
- Department of Family Practice
2Main Goals
- Define ethics and professionalism
- Discuss relationship
- How should each be taught?
- What about the CHM virtues?
- Propose and evaluate a 3 legged stool model of
professional integrity
3Medical Ethics and Events in Iraqi Prisons
- Lifton RJ. Doctors and torture. N Engl J Med
351415, 2004 - Miles SH. Abu Ghraib its legacy for military
medicine. Lancet 364725, 2004 - How complicit are doctors in abuses of detainees?
Lancet 364637, 2004 - Bloche MG, Marks JH. When doctors go to war. N
Engl J Med 3524, 2005
4Case
- AR 15-6 Investigation of the Abu Ghraib Detention
Facility and 205th Military Intelligence Brigade,
MG George R. Fay - http//news.findlaw.com/nytimes/docs/dod/fay82504r
pt.pdf
5Case (2)
- Incident 19 (approx 4-13 Dec 2003) SGT Adams
found DETAINEE-06 without clothes or blanket, his
wounds were bleeding and he had a catheter on
without a bag. The MPs told her they had no
clothes for the detainee. SGT Adams ordered the
MPs to get the detainee some clothes and went to
the medical site to get the doctor on duty. The
doctor (Colonel) asked what SGT Adams wanted and
was asked if he was aware the detainee still had
a catheter on.
6Case (3)
- The Colonel said he was, the Combat Army Surgical
Hospital (CASH) had made a mistake, and he
couldnt remove it because the CASH was
responsible for it. SGT Adams told him this was
unacceptable, he again refused to remove it and
stated the detainee was due to go back to the
CASH the following day. SGT Adams asked if he had
ever heard of the Geneva Conventions, and the
Colonel responded fine Sergeant, you do what you
have to do, I am going back to bed.
7Analysis
- Was the physician in this case acting
professionally? - Was the sergeant in this case acting
professionally? - What does professionalism require of the military
physician?
8Basic Obligations of Military Physicians Toward
Detainees
- Provide medical care (ideally as good as would be
received by US soldiers) - Monitor sanitation and public health
- Refuse to participate in torture
- Report torture
- Train subordinates appropriately
- Geneva Convention Army regs WHO Code of Ethics
9One Physicians Comment
- All military physicians are officers
- Therefore have a dual responsibility to
report/prevent torture or abuse - As physicians
- As officers
10An Irony
- Several Republican senators have offered
amendment to Pentagon funding bill - White House has threatened veto
- Amendment requires that standards of
interrogation of detainees be consistent with
Army manual - What does this say about professionalism in
military?
11Suggested Distinction
- Duties owed to all other human beings
- Duties owed to others because one occupies a
specific social role - Duties owed to others arising from the core
nature of that social role - All are ethics
- Last is professionalism
12Medical Examples
- Duty not to have sex with patients
- Duty to respect confidentiality
- Duty to respect patients autonomy
(self-determination)
13Hippocratic Duties
- Long historical tradition
- Suggests that despite radical changes in other
social practices, physicians have discerned that
commitment to their profession requires such a
duty - Therefore part of professionalism
14Respect for Autonomy
- Different from other duties?
- Historically physicians felt no such duty
- In other cultures physicians may feel no such
duty - Therefore not required by core notion of
profession? - Ethics but not professionalism
- Yet profession is evolving
15Promise-Keeping
- Professionalism has a component of
promise-keeping that need not be shared by ethics
more generally - When one professes to the status of physician,
one promises the community that one will behave
according to expected core duties
16The CHM Virtue List
- Competence
- Honesty
- Compassion
- Respect for Others
- Professional Responsibility
- Social Responsibility
17Ethics and Virtue
- The CHM list of professional behaviors describes
a set of virtues of the good (student) physician - How does virtue fit in with ethics?
18Two Ethical Questions
- What ought to be done in this situation, all
things considered? - Snapshot ethics
- Main focus of HM 546 ethics module
- How ought I live a life of moral excellence in my
chosen profession? - Video ethics
- Main focus of professionalism curriculum
19What Are Virtues?
- Excellences in human behavior
- Represent core moral values
- One tries to live a life so that ones daily
behavior exemplifies those core values - Obituary test (inherently biographical view)
20Example Compassion
- Core personal and professional value (defines
ideal physician) - What would the ideally compassionate physician do
in this situation? - How would the ideally compassionate physician go
about living a life with medicine as a chosen
career?
21A Famous Musician
- If I dont practice for one day, I know it. If I
dont practice for two days, the critics know it.
If I dont practice for three days, the audience
knows it. - Fine discernment and virtue
22Fine Discernment
- Virtue ideally involves doing the right thing, in
the right way, for the right reasons, with the
right attitude - Like becoming a music virtuoso, achieving optimal
virtue is a life long project - Irony The more virtuous one is, the better one
can detect even slight lapses
23Compassion
- Response to the fellow human who is suffering
- Beginner Oh, dont worry, it cant be that bad
- Responds to my discomfort at others suffering
- Challenge To appropriately be present with the
suffering person, appropriately vulnerable to
their suffering, while remaining whole oneself - Requires extensive experience and practice
24Compassion, cont.
- Conscious and unconscious elements
- Conscious wish to reflect carefully on what
compassion is and why it is important (e.g., why
not sympathy?) - Unconscious I wish in the future to respond
automatically to a new situations as a
compassionate person would - Goal To be compassionate even when Im having a
bad day
25Important Concepts
- Ethics
- Virtue
- Integrity ( wholeness)
26Three-Legged Stool
- Proposed model to describe typical moral tensions
that arise in trying to live a life of integrity
in medicine
27A Traditional Argument
- The physicians professional and social
responsibility is solely and completely
determined by one ethical role serving as a
single-minded advocate for each individual patient
28physicians are required to do everything that
they believe may benefit each patient without
regard to costs or other societal considerations.
--N. Levinsky, NEJM 3111573, 1984
29The Virtuous Physician
Individual patient advocacy
30Medicines Future
- Resources will be limited and some system of
rationing will be needed - Physicians will increasingly be held accountable
for how they spend other peoples money
31Newer Argument
- Physicians cannot be completely ethical merely by
being advocates for individual patients they
must advocate for all patients collectively by
concerning themselves with the prudent allocation
of limited resources
32The Tension The Physician as--
Prudent allocator of limited resources
Loyal patient advocate
33The Virtuous Physician
Individual patient advocacy
Advocate for population of patients
34Example Time Spent with Each Patient
- Complaint Managed care forces the physician to
rush patients through too quickly - Does the managed care contract require
limitations of time per visit? - Or must the physician see more patients faster if
he/she wishes to maintain a certain level of
income?
35If the providers can somehow insist upon
driving Cadillacs, then a given health care
budget set aside by societywill make available
to patients fewer real health services than would
be available if providers could be induced
somehow to make do with Chevrolets.
--U. Reinhardt, Milbank Q 1987
36The Virtuous Physician
Advocate for popu- lation of pa- tients
Individual patient advocacy
Reasonable self-interest
37Three-Legged Stool
- Argues that to live a whole life, one has to
consider ones own personal interests as being in
some sort of reasonable balance with competing
interests - Ignoring these tensions seems to portray medical
ethics in an unrealistic light (Sunday sermon)
38The Virtuous Physician
39The Virtuous Physician?
Reasonable self-interest
Advocate for popu- lation of pa- tients
Individual patient advocacy
40The Virtuous Physician?
Reasonable self-interest
Advocate for popu- lation of pa- tients
Individual patient advocacy
41Tension Virtuous and Non-virtuous Behavior
Deficiency Golden Mean Excess
Nontrustworthi-ness Individual advocacy Wastefulness
Wastefulness Population advocacy Pure statistician
Self-abnegation Reasonable self-interest Greed
42Three-Legged Stool
- The ideally virtuous physician strives throughout
a professional life to balance these tensions - Among the three competing values (legs)
- Against the pulls on each leg to move away from
the golden mean