The document outlines several key ethical principles for doctors: beneficence, non-maleficence, respect for autonomy, and justice. It also discusses the principles of respect for dignity, veracity, and confidentiality. For each principle, it provides details on what they mean and how doctors should apply them, such as getting informed consent from patients, keeping patient information private, and acting in the best interest of patients. Traits of an ideal doctor are discussed as being confident, humane, personal, forthright, respectful, empathetic, and thorough.
The document outlines several key ethical principles for doctors: beneficence, non-maleficence, respect for autonomy, and justice. It also discusses the principles of respect for dignity, veracity, and confidentiality. For each principle, it provides details on what they mean and how doctors should apply them, such as getting informed consent from patients, keeping patient information private, and acting in the best interest of patients. Traits of an ideal doctor are discussed as being confident, humane, personal, forthright, respectful, empathetic, and thorough.
The document outlines several key ethical principles for doctors: beneficence, non-maleficence, respect for autonomy, and justice. It also discusses the principles of respect for dignity, veracity, and confidentiality. For each principle, it provides details on what they mean and how doctors should apply them, such as getting informed consent from patients, keeping patient information private, and acting in the best interest of patients. Traits of an ideal doctor are discussed as being confident, humane, personal, forthright, respectful, empathetic, and thorough.
The document outlines several key ethical principles for doctors: beneficence, non-maleficence, respect for autonomy, and justice. It also discusses the principles of respect for dignity, veracity, and confidentiality. For each principle, it provides details on what they mean and how doctors should apply them, such as getting informed consent from patients, keeping patient information private, and acting in the best interest of patients. Traits of an ideal doctor are discussed as being confident, humane, personal, forthright, respectful, empathetic, and thorough.
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Code of Ethics and Practice of
Doctor Prof George Mathew Ethical Codes of Doctors Conduct
• Four basic principles of medical ethics:
• 1) Beneficence • 2) Non-Maleficence, • 3) Respect for Autonomy, • 4) Justice. Also include the Principle of • 5)Respect for Dignity and • 6)the Principle of Veracity The Principle of Beneficence
• Medical practitioners should always act
in the best interests of the patient.
• More specifically, they should prevent harm,
remove harm, and promote good for the patient.
In the delivery of health care, the relevant harms
to be prevented ,include pain and suffering, disease, disability, and death The Principle of Non-Maleficence
• Medical practitioners must not harm the
patient.
• This principle is based on the ancient maxim
“First, do no harm”
• primum non nocere( Latin)
• With the addition of this principle, the
requirement to act in the best interests of the patient becomes more complicated Beneficence and Non-Maleficence
• Medical interventions normally involve both
harms and goods, often described as risks and benefits. This means that the
• Principle of Beneficence and the Principle of
Non-Maleficence will often need to be applied together. Beneficence and Non-Maleficence
• Combining these two principles requires both an
identification of the risks and benefits of a particular intervention and a comparison of the harms done, the harms prevented or removed, and the goods promoted for the patient. The result of these considerations will determine what is in the patient’s best interests. Respect for Autonomy • Capable patients must be allowed to accept or refuse recommended medical interventions or treatment • “Autonomy” is defined as the capacity for self- determination or the capacity to make one’s own decisions. • In the health care context, this capacity involves the ability to make and communicate health care decisions.
• Respect for patient autonomy requires that those
with this capacity be permitted to accept or refuse treatment alternatives recommended by their physicians. Voluntary informed consent • Of vital importance to the application of this principle is the requirement of • voluntary informed consent • Capable patients must be provided with full, relevant, and truthful information about recommended treatments and any reasonable alternatives, including expected benefits, potential risks, and the results of refusing treatment altogether. • They must understand this information and make a voluntary decision without coercion or undue influence. Justice • Firstly, for decisions that a Doctor must take must try to exclude decisions that have no moral basis or justification. Neither pursuit of any own self interest • - For example, accepting bribes from patients, hospitals, or drug manufacturers – nor action that discriminates against patients on the basis of personal preference or prejudice can provide a just or morally acceptable basis for allocating scarce health care resources or for any other category of justice. • Moreover, it is not the role as a doctor to punish patients; withholding antibiotics from Smokers who do not give up smoking or refusing to refer heavy drinkers with liver damage induced by alcohol for specialist assessment on the grounds that they are at fault is not a just or morally acceptable basis for rationing my Respect for Dignity
• Patients, their families and surrogate decision
makers, as well as health care providers, all have the right to dignity. • It is based on the fundamental idea that all persons should be treated with respect and dignity. • Respect for people’s dignity includes respect for their emotions, relationships, reasonable goals, privacy, and bodily integrity Respect for Dignity
• Principle of Respect for Dignity requires respect
for the social, cultural, and religious background of patients, their families, and surrogate decision makers
• This principle requires good communication
skills, including active listening and the willingness to provide information, even when decisions are not being made. Respect for Dignity
• The Principle of Respect for Dignity also requires
confidentiality for patients medical conditions and the treatments they are receiving.
• Their inability to make decisions and even their
inability to experience emotions and relationships must not allow medical practitioners to ignore their basic dignity as human beings. Confidentiality-Respect for Dignity • This is an important element in the maintenance of the patient’s privacy.
• Medical information about a patient must not be
revealed to anyone who is not involved in the care of that patient.
• When patients are incapable of making their own
medical decisions, information may be revealed to those who are legally authorized to make these decisions. The Principle of Veracity • Always being truthful • The capable patient must be provided with the complete truth about his or her medical condition. • Capable patients must be provided with the complete truth about their medical conditions, both at the point of diagnosis and as their condition progresses. This is • The only way that a patient can make a truly informed decision about accepting or rejecting recommended medical interventions. • Patients must also be informed about their conditions in case experimental treatments were to become available 4 Key Ethical Principles •Beneficence •Non-maleficence •Autonomy •Justice 4 ethical rules • Veracity – truth telling, informed consent, respect for autonomy
• Privacy – a persons right to remain private, to not
disclose information
• Confidentiality – only sharing private information on
a ‘need to know basis’
• Fidelity – loyalty, maintaining the duty to care for all no
matter who they are or what they may have done 7 Key Traits of the Ideal Doctor
Prof George Mathew
Confident • Confident: "The doctor's confidence gives me confidence." Humane • Humane: "The doctor is caring, compassionate, and kind." Personal • Personal: "The doctor is interested in me more than just as a patient, interacts with me, and remembers me as an individual." Forthright • Forthright: "The doctor tells me what I need to know in plain language and in a forthright manner." • Respectful: "The doctor takes my input seriously and works with me." • Empathetic: "The doctor tries to understand what I am feeling and experiencing, physically and emotionally, and communicates that understanding to me." Thorough • Thorough: "The doctor is conscientious and persistent." Avoidable Traits • Timid • Uncaring • Misleading • Cold • Callous • Disrespectful • Hurried