| Literature DB >> 22719799 |
Silke Schicktanz1, Mark Schweda.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Although the term "responsibility" plays a central role in bioethics and public health, its meaning and implications are often unclear. This paper defends the importance of a more systematic conception of responsibility to improve moral philosophical as well as descriptive analysis.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22719799 PMCID: PMC3375421 DOI: 10.1007/s12376-011-0070-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Stud ISSN: 1876-4533
Summary of 7 major relata for professional responsibility in organ transplantation
| Subject (in different roles) | Object (seen as morally relevant) | Instance (norm-proofing) | Moral-relevant standard | Temporal direction | Consequences | Time frame |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physician | Patient (recipient) | Law/ethos | Beneficence | Retrospective_negative | Professional sanctions? | Limited to individual treatment until cure or death |
| Prospective_positive | Recognition by patient | |||||
| Collective of recipients | Justice/efficiency? | Retrospective_negative | Legal sanctions | Theoretically unlimited (as long as there are not enough donor organs) | ||
| Prospective_positive | Power as gate keeper |
Individual and family responsibility in the context of advance directives
| Subject (in different roles) | Object (seen as morally relevant) | Instance (norm-proofing) | Moral-relevant standard | Temporal direction | Consequences | Time frame |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Citizens as potential patient | Self | Conscience | Virtue: to be considerate | Retrospective_negative | Dependency (on physician and family) if no AD, or even blame | For the time of being competent, but disputable how long in advance is valid |
| Relatives | Prospective_positive | Self-determined end of life | ||||
| Family | Patient | Law (as attorney) | Respect for autonomy/care | Prospective_negative | Only in life-ending cases: loss of decision power (to court) | In case of patient’s loss of competence |
Summary of the major 7 relata for individual, family, professional, and social responsibility in the case of genetic testing
| Subject (in different roles) | Object (seen as morally relevant) | Instance (norm-proofing) | Moral-relevant standard | Temporal direction | Consequences | Time frame |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self | Self | Conscience | Autonomy | Retrospective_negative | Accept possible harm | In late onset disease: life long, decades |
| Prospective_positive | Free choice | |||||
| Self-care | Retrospective_negative | Guilt/blame | In late onset disease: life long, decades | |||
| Prospective_positive | Prevention | |||||
| Family | Conscience | Right to know/duty to inform | Retrospective_negative | Blame/guilt if not informed | Closely after the knowledge is gained, but theoretical for many years | |
| Prospective_positive | Preventive (e.g., family planning), good “risk” management | |||||
| Right not to know/duty not to tell | Retrospective_negative | Family distress if told | Closely after the knowledge is gained, but theoretical for many years | |||
| Prospective_positive | Protection of families from social-psychological burdens | |||||
| Professional | Patient | Soft law/law | Non-directive counseling | Retrospective_negative | Legal liability for counselor | During the treatment |
| Prospective_positive | Professional exclusiveness (power) | |||||
| Public healthcare system | Citizens | ? | Justice and equality | Prospective_negative | Waste of health care resources/inefficient allocation | Theoretically decades, but changing political systems |
| ? | ? |