Literature DB >> 11651605

Doing what the patient orders: maintaining integrity in the doctor-patient relationship.

Jeffrey Blustein.   

Abstract

No profession has undergone as much scrutiny in the past several decades as that of medicine. Indeed, one might well argue that no profession has ever undergone so much change in so short a time. An essential part of this change has been the growing insistence that competent, adult patients have the right to decide about the course of their own medical treatment. However, the familiar and widely accepted principle of patient self-determination entails a corollary that has received little attention in the growing literature on the ethics of physician-patient relations: if patients are to direct the course of their own medical treatment, then physicians are at least sometimes to be guided in their actions on behalf of patients by values that are not, and may even be incompatible with, their own values. Unless it is supposed that it would be best if physicians were simply to accommodate any and all patient requests, a possibility I consider and reject in this paper, there are bound to be numerous instances of legitimate moral conflict between the preferences of physicians and patients. In this paper, I examine the implications of this sort of moral conflict from the standpoint of the integrity of the physician....I have also considered the common practice of patient referral from the standpoint of physician integrity, and asked whether a physician who refuses to treat a patient as a matter of conscience can consistently refer the patient to another physician for the same treatment....

Entities:  

Keywords:  Analytical Approach; Bioethics and Professional Ethics; Professional Patient Relationship

Mesh:

Year:  1993        PMID: 11651605     DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8519.1993.tb00220.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioethics        ISSN: 0269-9702            Impact factor:   1.898


  11 in total

1.  Physician participation in capital punishment: a question of professional integrity.

Authors:  A Sikora; A R Fleischman
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2.  Physician's conscience and HECs: friends or foes?

Authors:  E M Spencer
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  1998-03

3.  Rounding: how everyday ethics can invigorate a hospital's ethics committee.

Authors:  Evan G Derenzo; Nneka Mokwunye; John J Lynch
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4.  Harm or Mere Inconvenience? Denying Women Emergency Contraception.

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5.  Why Conscience Matters: A Theory of Conscience and Its Relevance to Conscientious Objection in Medicine.

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Journal:  Res Publica       Date:  2022-06-24

Review 6.  When is medical treatment futile? A guide for students, residents, and physicians.

Authors:  Deborah L Kasman
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 5.128

7.  Should patient consent be required to write a do not resuscitate order?

Authors:  P Biegler
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2003-12       Impact factor: 2.903

Review 8.  Patient decision-making: medical ethics and mediation.

Authors:  Y J Craig
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  1996-06       Impact factor: 2.903

9.  Do patients have duties?

Authors:  H M Evans
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2007-12       Impact factor: 2.903

10.  Patients' perception and actual practice of informed consent, privacy and confidentiality in general medical outpatient departments of two tertiary care hospitals of Lahore.

Authors:  Ayesha Humayun; Noor Fatima; Shahid Naqqash; Salwa Hussain; Almas Rasheed; Huma Imtiaz; Sardar Zakariya Imam
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2008-09-25       Impact factor: 2.652

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