Literature DB >> 11262633

Doctor does not know best: why in the new century physicians must stop trying to benefit patients.

R M Veatch1.   

Abstract

While twentieth-century medical ethics has focused on the duty of physicians to benefit their patients, the next century will see that duty challenged in three ways. First, we will increasingly recognize that it is unrealistic to expect physicians to be able to determine what will benefit their patients. Either they limit their attention to medical well-being when total well-being is the proper end of the patient or they strive for total well-being, which takes them beyond their expertise. Even within the medical sphere, they have no basis for choosing among the proper medical goals for medicine. Also, there are many plausible strategies for relating predicted benefits to harms, and physicians cannot be expert in picking among these strategies. Second, increasingly plausible ethical systems recognize that in some cases, patient benefit must be sacrificed to protect patient rights including the right to the truth, to have promises kept, to have autonomy respected, and to not be killed. Third, ethics of the next century will increasingly recognize that some patient benefits must be sacrificed to fulfill duties to others - either the duty to serve the interests of others or other duties such as keeping promises, telling the truth, and, particularly, promoting justice. Physicians in the twenty-first century will be seen as having a new, more limited duty to assist the patient in pursuing the patient's understanding of the patient's interest within the constraints of deontological ethical principles and externally imposed duties to promote justice. The result will be a duty to be loyal to the consumer of health care with the recognition that often this will mean that the physician is not permitted to pursue the physician's understanding of the patient's well-being.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11262633     DOI: 10.1076/jmep.25.6.701.6126

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Philos        ISSN: 0360-5310


  11 in total

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Authors:  S I Saarni; H A Gylling
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2.  Autonomy, wellbeing, and the case of the refusing patient.

Authors:  J Varelius
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2006

3.  Blood ties and trust: a comparative history of policy on family consent in Japan and the United States.

Authors:  Hiroyuki Nagai
Journal:  Monash Bioeth Rev       Date:  2017-11

4.  Directive counsel and morally controversial medical decision-making: findings from two national surveys of primary care physicians.

Authors:  Michael S Putman; John D Yoon; Kenneth A Rasinski; Farr A Curlin
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2013-10-11       Impact factor: 5.128

5.  Free Choice and Patient Best Interests.

Authors:  Emma C Bullock
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2016-12

6.  Making good choices: toward a theory of well-being in medicine.

Authors:  Alicia Hall
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2016-10

Review 7.  The agency problem and medical acting: an example of applying economic theory to medical ethics.

Authors:  Andreas Langer; Peter Schröder-Bäck; Alexander Brink; Johannes Eurich
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2008-05-10

8.  Trust but verify: the interactive effects of trust and autonomy preferences on health outcomes.

Authors:  Yin-Yang Lee; Julia L Lin
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2009-01-07

9.  Best interests, public interest, and the power of the medical profession.

Authors:  John Coggon
Journal:  Health Care Anal       Date:  2008-07-19

10.  Teaching seven principles for public health ethics: towards a curriculum for a short course on ethics in public health programmes.

Authors:  Peter Schröder-Bäck; Peter Duncan; William Sherlaw; Caroline Brall; Katarzyna Czabanowska
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2014-10-07       Impact factor: 2.652

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