| Literature DB >> 34742309 |
Bjørn Hofmann1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The edge metaphor is ubiquitous in describing the present situation in the world, and nowhere is this as clearly visible as in medicine. "The edge of medicine" has become the title of books, scholarly articles, media headlines, and lecture series and seems to be imbued with hype, hope, and aversion. In order better to understand what is at stake at "the edge of medicine" this article addresses three questions: What does "the edge of medicine" mean in contemporary debates on modern medicine? What are the challenges "on the edge of medicine" (in these various meanings of "on the edge")? How can philosophy and ethics contribute with addressing these challenges?Entities:
Keywords: Challenges; Edge; Ethics; Metaphor; Philosophy; Role; Technology
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34742309 PMCID: PMC8572077 DOI: 10.1186/s13010-021-00114-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Philos Ethics Humanit Med ISSN: 1747-5341 Impact factor: 2.464
A summary of some important meanings of “the edge of medicine,” some examples, the corresponding key issues and challenges as well as the role of philosophy and ethics
| Meaning of “on the edge” | Example | Key issue and | Role of Philosophy and/or Ethics |
|---|---|---|---|
On the border of what belongs to or counts as medicine | Expansion of concepts of disease, illness, or sickness. Between esthetics and ethics (Cosmetic surgery) Between healthcare and home care Between professionals and patients/relatives (roles) Between covered and non-covered services (dentistry) Between medical and “non-medical conditions”: • Sports medicine • Female genital mutilation • Male circumcision | Differentiating between what is disease (illness or sickness) and not, what belongs to the goals and tasks of the health professional and the health care system and what is more appropriately handled by others, and when the health services do more good than harm. | Defining essence or goal Revealing diagnostic creep, overdiagnosis, overtreatment, medicalization Clarify concepts (disease, aging, autonomy, coercion) Clarify the relationship between professionalism and ethics |
Neonatology Palliative care Physician assisted suicide Euthanasia | Demarcation (of existence). Defining the tasks of medicine at the margins of life | Setting limits (to existence) Defining key concepts, such as life, death, person, pain, moral status | |
The application of the knowledge and remedies of advanced medicine in areas of austerity Global health emergencies Health services to refugees and asylum seekers • DNA-testing, ethics and migration • Age determination in refugee children • Refugees’ access to health care • Domestic violence among asylum seekers | Relevance • Are our approaches in medicine relevant for other contexts? Jurisdiction • How far does the jurisdiction of our health care system go? | Reflecting on cultural and social contingency, universality Demarcation Reflection on goals Emergency bioethics | |
Forefront | Forefront of research New technologies • Gene editing, gene drives • DtC genetic testing Experimental treatments Validation of personalised medicine AI-based diagnosis and treatment decisions Medical enhancement | Conception Expansion Demarcation Cost containment Resource allocation | Clarifying concepts (human being, natural, therapy, knowledge, information, responsibility) Clarifying goals Analysing analogies Providing methods for knowledge production and assessment (epistemology). |
| Conceptual and moral grey zones | Vagueness (conceptual) Relevance (moral) | Defining and handling: • Vagueness • Relevance | |
| Situations without moral resolutions | • Culpability, blame, shame • Moral distress • Residue, remorse • Tragic choices | Defining and handling: • Culpability, shame • Moral distress • Residue (moral) • Tragic choices | |
Moral dilemmas Moral failure Moral disagreement Catch-22-situations. | Disagreement Conflicting perspectives | Conceptual clarification Critique of perspectives and arguments Brokering | |
Mammography screening Reject and retake of medical images | Judgement, balancing, Quality, optimization | Finding ways to balance interests, perspectives, and concerns Quality assurance |
Initiatives to provide appropriate care (avoiding underuse and overuse). Based on [107, 108]
| Name of initiative, country | Description, year | Link |
|---|---|---|
| NICE „DoNotDo “Database, UK: | Savings and Productivity, 2006 | |
| Choosing Wisely (AIMB), USA + | Reducing waste, 2012 | |
| Slow Medicine, IT | Appropriate care, 2013 | |
| Preventing Overdiagnosis, UK + USA | Reducing overdiagnosis, 2013 | |
| Lown Institute: Right Care Movement, USA | Appropriate care, 2013 | |
| Smarter Medicine, CH | Appropriate care, 2014 | |
| Prudent Health Care, Wales-UK | Prodent care, 2016 | |
| Wiser Healthcare, AUS | Research collaboration for reducing overdiagnosis and overtreatment |