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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Davey, Patrick, editor. | Rathmell, Anna, editor. | Dunn, Michael, 1980- editor. |
Foster, Charles, 1962- editor. | Salisbury, Helen, 1963- editor.
Title: Medical ethics, law and communication at a glance / edited by Patrick Davey,
Anna Rathmell, Michael Dunn, Charles Foster, Helen Salisbury.
Other titles: At a glance series (Oxford, England)
Description: Chichester, West Sussex, UK : John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., 2017. |
Series: At a glance series | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016022212 (print) | LCCN 2016023250 (ebook) | ISBN
9780470670644 (pbk.) | ISBN 9781119266174 (pdf) | ISBN 9781119266167 (epub)
Subjects: | MESH: Ethics, Medical | Legislation, Medical | Health Communication |
Professional-Patient Relations | Bioethical Issues | Great Britain | Handbooks
Classification: LCC R724 .M29424 2017 (print) | LCC R724 (ebook) | NLM W 49 |
DDC 344.4104/1—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2016022212
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
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Cover image: © Getty/-Oxford-
Patrick Davey
Consultant Cardiologist
Training Program Director for General Medicine
in Health Education
Northampton General Hospital
East Midlands, UK
Michael Dunn
Lecturer in Health and Social Care Ethics
The Ethox Centre
Nuffield Department of Population Health
University of Oxford, UK
Charles Foster
Fellow of Green Templeton College
University of Oxford, UK
Anna Rathmell
Medical Manager, Takeda Pharmaceuticals UK Ltd
Lay Member, Oxford C Research Ethics committee, Oxford, UK
[The contents of this book do not necessarily represent the views of Takeda Pharmaceuticals or the Oxford C Research Ethics committee]
Helen Salisbury
Honorary Senior Clinical Lecturer
Nuffield Department of Primary Care
Health Sciences
University of Oxford, UK
Richard Ashcroft
School of Law, Queen Mary, University of London, UK
3. Ethical reasoning
Ben Bradley
Outer Temple Chambers, London, UK
9. Battery and assault
Jamie Carpenter
Hailsham Chambers, London, UK
22. End of life care
Grace Charles
Overlook Medical Center, Summit, NJ, USA
18. Allocation of resources
John Coggon
Law School. University of Bristol, UK
17. Public health
Liam Curren
Genomics Plc, Oxford, UK
5. The English legal system
John William Devine
Department of Philosophy, University of Birmingham, UK
5. The English legal system
Sharon Dixon
Donnington Health Centre Oxford, UK
32. Shared decision making
Michael Dunn
The Ethox Centre, University of Oxford, UK
1. What is medical ethics?
10. Confidentiality
11. Consent
Prem Fade
Poole Hospital, Poole, UK
21. Care of older adults
Elizabeth Fistein
Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, UK
15. Mental health
Charles Foster
Green Templeton College, University of Oxford, UK
6. Relationship between ethics, law and professionalism
Imogen Goold
Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, UK
4. What is medical law?
Kate Greasley
Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, UK
13. Termination of pregnancy
Cara Guthrie
Outer Temple Chambers, London, UK
8. Negligence
Jonathan Herring
Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, UK
12. Reproduction
16. Safeguarding children and adults
Caroline Huang
Department of Bioethics, National Institutes of Health, USA
19. Clinical genetics
Liza Keating
Royal Berkshire Hospital, Reading, UK
2. Ethical theories and principles
Sam Mills
University Hospital Southampton, UK
33. Communication of risk
Christopher Newdick
School of Law, University of Reading, UK
18. Allocation of resources
Andrew Papanikitas
Nuffield Department of Primary Health Care Sciences, University of Oxford, UK
24. Primary care
Muireann Quigley
Newcastle Law School, Newcastle University, UK
14. Organ donation and transplantation
Anna Rathmell
Takeda Pharmaceuticals UK Ltd
Oxford C Research Ethics committee
10. Confidentiality
Suzanne Shale
Clearer Thinking, London, UK
23. Health management
Mark Sheehan
The Ethox Centre, University of Oxford, UK
18. Allocation of resources
Anne Slowther
Warwick Medical School, University of
Warwick, UK
7. Ethical decisions in practice
Dita Wickins-Drazilova
School of Medicine, School of Dentistry and School of Nursing, University of Dundee, UK
7. Ethical decisions in practice
Ruth Wilson
Temple Cowley Health Centre, Oxford, UK
39. Communicating across cultures
40. Communication with people with disability
41. Communicating with colleagues
42. Professionalism
43. Feedback
44. Looking after yourself
Eliot Woolf
Outer Temple Chambers, London, UK
20. Human research
This book helps you to become a complete doctor. Technical prowess matters in medicine, but to be a good doctor it is not sufficient only to be technically competent: one must have additional skills. Technical ability comprises those crucial skills to make a diagnosis and deliver effective treatment, whether pharmaceutical, talking, surgical, radiation or whatever. These technical skills are not easy. Indeed, mastery of them is often difficult. One has to draw together the threads of a story, sift through contradictory examination and investigative findings, draw up a differential diagnosis, eliminate the impossible, degrade the unlikely and settle on the right diagnosis supported by the facts. Sometimes the diagnosis is easy; sometimes, indeed more often, it is not. Whether the diagnosis is known or not, treatment may be no easier. If there is uncertainty about the diagnosis, so there will be with the treatment. Even when there is certainty, the drugs may not work, and, if one operates, the surgery can be both mentally and physically demanding. The technical skills needed to be an effective clinician are considerable and they pose major stresses for clinicians. They are an absolute prerequisite to be a good doctor. These skills are often, indeed almost universally, undervalued by hospitals and healthcare systems. While essential, they are not sufficient by themselves to be an effective clinician. One must have additional skills: a good doctor must be part of a functioning team, must understand the political nature of the healthcare system, must perform within the law, within an ethical framework, and must communicate effectively, both with patients and managers. It helps if you understand and look after yourself, particularly emotionally. Many of these necessary additional skills are the subject of this book. The legal framework under which we all practise is outlined, medical ethics is introduced, and the principles of good communication demonstrated. These chapters provide the essential knowledge that turn excellent technical doctors into rounded clinicians, into those doctors that we all aspire to be. I hope you find them useful to gain that essential extra knowledge and skill needed to be an excellent doctor, and I wish you every success. It has been great fun writing this book with my colleagues. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as we all did writing it.
Medical ethics is a discipline concerned with the systematic analysis of values in healthcare.
But this definition only gets us so far. We need to be clear about what healthcare values are, what it means to systematically analyse these values, and what it means to do so in the varied policy and practice contexts in which healthcare takes place. The first issue relates to the content of medical ethics, the second to its methods and the third to its scope. Each of these issues will be considered in turn.
Medical ethics is founded on the idea that there are discrete ethical values specific to healthcare. Put another way, practitioners working in health owe something to those whom they care for precisely because they are involved in healthcare provision, and such provision is importantly different from other professions and the general obligations that human beings owe to each other. The justification for this special set of ethical values is usually articulated by observing that one’s health is fundamental, in some sense, to one’s life plan. Because being healthy is a prerequisite to pursuing other valuable goals, having access to healthcare, being able to make decisions about the care one receives, and being treated well within the healthcare relationship, is morally significant.
Much work in medical ethics is concerned with specifying the correct ethical values that underpin good healthcare. This project is one that is necessarily sensitive to moral theory, and that most commonly takes the form of identifying so-called ‘mid-level principles’ that seek to reflect and combine different theoretical considerations to provide a coherent, and ethically justifiable, roadmap for good practice (see Chapter 2).
Once ethical principles for healthcare have been determined, the medical ethics project broadens out. One other activity is to attend carefully to how these abstract principles ought to be applied to specific healthcare decision-making settings in diverse parts of the world. The challenge of translating ethical values into practice is no small feat. The varied social, cultural, and economic differences that are characteristic of different healthcare institutions means that careful analytic work needs to be undertaken to know precisely what it means to do good for a patient, here.
Another activity that medical ethicists attend carefully to is the common situation in which it is evident that value conflicts arise between competing principles, and therefore where there is genuine uncertainty about what a healthcare practitioner or policy-maker ought to do. Such conflicts can take different forms. On the one hand, they might be akin to a traditional moral dilemma, where there are good ethical reasons for pursuing two different and mutually exclusive courses of action. What ought to be done, for example, when a teenage patient refuses a straightforward and life-saving blood transfusion on the basis that such a procedure would go against the religious beliefs that they hold dear? On the other hand, the conflicts might be less fundamental in nature, perhaps where a doctor is clear about what ought to be done, but is unable to act as they ought due to practical constraints, such as institutional rules or cultural expectations in her workplace. Addressing conflicts of this kind raises questions about the role of medical ethics in advocating for policy or practice changes, and also shifts the locus of analysis onto issues such as ‘moral distress’ that can arise when practitioners are prevented from acting as they ought.
Medical ethics is a broad church. Those contributing to medical ethics use a variety of methodological approaches, including both ethical analytic and empirical methods.
Methods of ethical analysis are deployed in order to develop arguments that aim to settle these conflicts – to determine what ought to be done in a situation of ethical uncertainty. Justification and argument are the methodological characteristics of this normative enterprise. A defence to the claim that ‘Doctors ought to do X’ depends on providing a justification, based on the reasons in support of this argument, against the reasons supporting the claim that ‘Doctors ought not to do X’ or ‘Doctors ought to do Y’. The extent to which a claim counts as a satisfactory answer to the question ‘What ought a doctor to do here?’ is judged in light of the standards of reasoning that apply to arguments generally. Thus, while rational argumentation of this form is generally seen to be philosophical in nature, it is in fact closely related to other analytic approaches, including the scientific method. Further information about ethical reasoning is provided in Chapter 3.
Empirical methods, on the other hand, are used primarily to describe how value conflicts arise within healthcare practice. Empirical methods can also be used to contribute to ethical argumentation by specifying evidence that can give substance to the reasons in favour, or against, a particular claim. If we think, for example, that a particular course of action is justified only if it would be widely accepted by the public, we need evidence that shows us whether the public would indeed accept that course of action. Finally, medical ethicists might draw on empirical methods to evaluate the impact of an ethical claim. If, for example, a research ethics committee is introduced in a healthcare setting to ensure that patients’ well-being is safeguarded when these patients are recruited to a clinical trial, we need to be able to show that the intervention does indeed safeguard well-being. If not, there is no ethical justification for introducing the committee on the basis of this argument.
As well as being an academic pursuit, medical ethics is also practised ‘on the ground’ in healthcare settings. Ethicists provide ethical guidance by the bedside, in the hospital boardroom, or as part of committees working in health settings. These ethics support functions are described in Chapter 7. In addition to recommending a specific course of practice, arguments within medical ethics might also focus on the regulations or laws that govern healthcare practice.
Similarly, the boundaries of what counts as a medical ethics issue is also open to dispute. Medical ethics might be differentiated from healthcare ethics, where the former is more narrowly focused on the moral duties of doctors, while the latter broadens its analytic lens to other professionals and to non-medical settings such as social and community-based care services. Equally, the boundaries between medical ethics and bioethics are difficult to ascertain, with the latter orientated more towards biotechnological issues than the professional world of healthcare. In common parlance, these different terms are used interchangeably, and little hangs on where the boundaries are drawn.
Consider the relatively common scenario in a district general hospital late one evening: an elderly patient who collapsed at home with a large intra-cerebral bleed is now intubated and ventilated in the emergency department. Prior to intubation the patient is deeply unconscious, with a Glasgow Coma Score of three. His case has already been discussed with the neurosurgeons who feel that the transfer to the regional neurosurgical centre for further management is not appropriate because the predicted outcome are universally poor (Figure 2.1).
What is the next course of action? He could be admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) for further assessment and review the following morning on withholding of sedation. Or should you consider a planned withdrawal of treatment that evening with his extubation and subsequent transfer to a medical ward for palliation? Does the knowledge that he is on the organ donation register make a difference? Will the situation change if this is the last empty bed in the ICU? Now consider your responses when it transpires that the patient is 96, not 69 as first thought. Are the wishes of the patient known to the clinical team? The family have been called and will not arrive this evening. How important is their input into the decisions that are required during the evening?
Ethical reasoning is critical to resolve ethical issues such as this one. However, if such reasoning is going to be able to guide clinicians’ actions in ways that are justifiable, ethical theories and principles must be incorporated into this process. This chapter will provide the background to the main ethical theories, the ethical principles that are derived from those theories and that are relevant to contemporary medical ethics.
Three different ethical theories dominate the landscape of medical ethics. These function to determine how particular decisions or actions can be judged to be right or wrong in ethical terms. It is from these three theories that four ethical principles have been derived. The principles are well established in modern medicine. The method behind their application is intended to be simple and easy to apply across many clinical situations. These four principles are also described below.
Consequentialist ethical theories claim that the rightness or wrongness of an action is judged solely by reference to the outcome of that action. For a consequentialist, the only morally relevant features of any action are its consequences.
Consequentialism is not a single ethical theory, rather it defines a category of theories. Utilitarianism is the most well-known consequentialist approach and the consequentialist theory that is most commonly applied and defended within healthcare. Utilitarianism gets its name from ‘utility’ – the value that ought to be maximised in determining the moral course of action. Utility is often interpreted in terms of ‘welfare’ or ‘well-being’. There are at least three alternative forms of utilitarianism that can be differentiated by the way that welfare is accounted for:
Part of the strength of utilitarian theories is that they are simple to comprehend and appeal to common sense. They also chime closely with the central activity of providing optimal outcomes for patients and endorse ‘well-being’ as their central value – a concept that is well recognised and understood within medical practice. However the theory faces a number of practical problems when applied to healthcare decision making. There can be difficulties in predicting and in evaluating the consequences of any particular action. For example, several consequences can arise from one act and it can be difficult to predict the probability of certain consequences following an act. The question is whether there is one consequence that will outweigh all others. Furthermore, problems can be encountered when the act under consideration will benefit one person or group but may be to the detriment of others.
Duty-based approaches define another category of ethical theories. These theories focus on the quality of the action itself rather than the consequences of that action. This ethical approach is also called ‘deontology’ from the Greek for ‘duty’, deon. So duty-based ethics are concerned with what people are duty-bound to do, or how they are obliged to act. While such duties might extend to maximising the consequences of any action, it is not the maximisation of consequences per se that would make this action right, but that a relevant duty had been fulfilled. In other cases some actions will be wrong irrespective of the consequences. If one is duty-bound not to lie, for example, no reference to the benefits that might accrue from lying can provide an ethical justification for not telling the truth.
Much of the thinking behind duty-based ethics has arisen from the work of the eighteenth-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant, and Kantian deontology is the most common duty-based ethical theory. The basic premise of Kant’s theory is that rational human beings have the capacity to make reasonable decisions and choose the right course of action. Kant formulated his theory and account of moral duties in a number of formulations of what he called the ‘categorical imperative’, a rule that is true for all people in all circumstances. The right action must i) be one that is universal, ii) involve treating human beings as ends in themselves rather than merely as means to ends, iii) be autonomously willed by rational agents, and
iv) establish the principles for a system of common laws.
More contemporary theorists have drawn upon and revised Kant’s work on the morality of actions and rationality to reconfigure how moral duties apply and can be identified. Thomas M. Scanlon offers a different duty-based theory of ethics. He proposes that the judgement as to whether an action is right or wrong depends upon individuals identifying principles that can be mutually recognised and justified by reference to the value of ways of living with others that it would not be reasonable to reject. Scanlon offers a view into the complexities of determining universal duties, which he summarises as ‘what we owe to each other’ – a form of contractual moral agreement.
Arising from the ancient Greek philosophies of Plato and Aristotle, virtue ethics are based on an understanding that the rightness or wrongness of an action is based upon the character of the individual, rather than by reference to the action at all. In addition, virtue ethics provides guidance on the characteristics and behaviours a good person will demonstrate.
Virtue-based ethics focuses on the character of the person rather than their actions. The traditional virtues included prudence, justice, fortitude or bravery and finally, temperance. While one of the strengths of a virtue-based approach is that it centres on the person, the weakness is that it is unclear whether this theory can provide any guidance for action in the face of a moral dilemma.
Alasdair MacIntyre has been a key figure in contemporary virtue-based ethics. He has called the virtues or qualities of character ‘internal goods’. MacIntyre has been a proponent of how virtues change over time while at the same time emphasising the historical context of ethics. The combination of the qualities of character viewed within both the historical and social context gives an understanding of how ethical issues arise and how the good life can be cultivated.
Principlism is a method for ethical decision making in medicine that promotes the application of four principles. These four principles are second-order principles that have been derived from the three main ethical theories to form a useful and universal approach to working through ethical decision making. The aim is to be simple, easy to apply and culturally neutral. Henceforth, when confronting a problem, it can be helpful to apply each principle to allow some clarity and transparency to the situation, taking each different ethical theoretical insight into account.
The first principle, respect for autonomy, is the obligation to allow patients to self-govern their own lives, and to make decisions about their medical care in line with their own conception of their life plans. Respecting patient autonomy is usually understood as allowing healthcare providers to discuss and, if necessary, educate the patient about the different options available, but it does not allow the healthcare provider to make the decision for the patient. Implicit within this is the premise that medical practitioners must respect and follow those wishes, even if they believe that the decision is bad or incorrect.
The principles of beneficence and non-maleficence are closely related. Beneficence is the obligation to do good for patients: balancing the objective benefits of treatment against the risks and costs involved to provide the best medical care. This principle centres on the idea that welfare of patients is the main concern. This is often understood to mean that we must act in the ‘best interests’ of patients, a principle that has been invoked in English law although with rather different requirements. Conflict can arise when respecting a patient’s autonomy means allowing the patient to make a decision that conflicts with what is thought to be in their best interests.
Non-maleficence is the obligation to avoid the causation of harm. As many treatments involve some degree of harm the principle of non-maleficence implies that the harm should not be out of proportion to the benefit of the treatment.
The final principle is justice. Justice requires medical practitioners to treat patients, and potentially the patients’ caregivers, in a fair or just manner. What justice requires in any given situation will depend on which theory of justice is invoked in order to account for fair or equitable treatment. On some accounts, fair treatment will require equal treatment, but on other accounts a patient could be treated unequally but fairly. Justice considerations most commonly taken priority in dilemmas about the allocation of limited health resources between patients.
When applying theories and principles to real-world decisions such as the one detailed above a range of different considerations will need to be taken into account. From a utilitarian perspective, it is worth considering admitting the patient to intensive care and undertaking a sedation hold in the morning. At that point, a withdrawal of active treatment decision could be made and the process of liaison with the organ transplant coordinator could begin. From a deontological perspective, this approach should perhaps be reconsidered given that this is the last ICU bed available and the doctor is under an obligation to benefit the patient. Adopting a virtue-based approach, it is likely that the appropriate decision will have been reached having taken the time to assess the clinical situation and then seek the views of both the patient and his family, and also taken the time to explain the decision reached to the entire clinical team.
Following discussion with the elderly patient’s family, it transpires that the patient would not have wanted admission to an ICU and would not have wanted to be resuscitated in the event of a cardiac arrest (Figure 2.2). Tissue donation is still a possibility and would have been in keeping with his wishes. The patient’s autonomy has been respected. In view of the likely clinical consequences, this is likely to be in his best interests and no harm has been done: so beneficence has been practised. Given that there is now still an ICU bed available, it would appear that justice has been done. The application of the four ethical principles allows satisfactory resolution of a potentially complex situation.
Different outcomes may have followed. There is no single approach that is right or wrong but an understanding of the ethical theories and principles allows a decision to be made. The application of an ethical framework allows greater transparency and accountability in justifying the decisions that are reached while at the same time allowing different aspects of the problem to be taken into consideration together.