medical ethics and professionalism review of part 1 february 11 2013
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Medical Ethics and Professionalism Review of Part 1 February 11 2013. Four principles of medical ethics Autonomy Beneficence Non-maleficence Social Justice Three elements of informed consent Voluntariness Information Competence. When the Patient is Incompetent. Guardian Probate court - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Medical Ethics and ProfessionalismReview of Part 1 February 11 2013
Four principles of medical ethicsAutonomyBeneficenceNon-maleficenceSocial JusticeThree elements of informed consentVoluntarinessInformation Competence
When the Patient is Incompetent
Guardian Probate court Guardian of person or estate or both
Advance directive Specifies what is to be done in the event patient is unable
to make a decision Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care
Who will make decision Living Will
Specifies particular decisions, e.g., ventilators Georgia Advance Directive for Health Care includes both
Power of Attorney and Living Will provisions (posted on ethics site, First Year)
Georgia Advance Directive for Health Care
GUIDANCE FOR HEALTH CARE AGENT When making health care decisions for me, my health care
agent should think about what action would be consistent with past conversations we have had, my treatment preferences as expressed in PART TWO (if I have filled out PART TWO), my religious and other beliefs and values, and how I have handled medical and other important issues in the past. If what I would decide is still unclear, then
My health care agent should make decisions for me that my health care agent believes are in my best interest, considering the benefits, burdens, and risks of my current circumstances and treatment options.
Substituted Judgment v Best Interests
Substituted judgment – for persons who have been competent to express a choice but who presently lack capacity Dementia Delirium Severe mental illness
Best interests standard – for persons never competent to have decided Children Mentally retarded/developmentally disabled Or when there is no information as to what the person
would have decided
Georgia Advance Directive for Health Care
PART TWO will be effective if I am in any of the following conditions: A terminal condition, which means I have an incurable
or irreversible condition that will result in my death in a
relatively short period of time, and/or; A state of permanent unconsciousness, which means I
am in an incurable or irreversible condition in which I am
not aware of myself or my environment and I show no behavioral response to my environment.
To be determined by personal and second physician
Georgia Advance Directive for Health Care
Try to extend my life for as long as possible, using all medications, machines, or other medical procedures that in reasonable medical judgment could keep me alive. If I am unable to take nutrition or fluids by mouth, then I want to receive nutrition or fluids by tube or other medical means, OR;
Allow my natural death to occur. I do not want any medications, machines, or other medical procedures that in reasonable medical judgment could keep me alive but cannot cure me. I do not want to receive nutrition or fluids by tube or other medical means except as needed to provide pain medication, OR;
Georgia Advance Directive for Health Care
I do not want any medications, machines, or other medical procedures that in reasonable medical judgment could keep me alive but cannot cure me, except as follows:
[Initial each statement that you want to apply to option (C).] If I am unable to take nutrition by mouth, I want to receive nutrition by tube or
other medical means. If I am unable to take fluids by mouth, I want to receive fluids by tube or other
medical means. If I need assistance to breathe, I want to have a ventilator used. If my heart or pulse has stopped, I want to have cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) used.
Default Surrogate Decisionmakers I
If a decisionmaker is not specified or is not available: § 31-9-2. Persons authorized to consent to surgical or medical
treatment (a) any one of the following persons is empowered to consent: (1) Any [competent] adult, for himself or herself, whether by living
will, advance directive for health care, or otherwise; (1.1) Any person authorized to give such consent for the adult under
an advance directive for health care or durable power of attorney for
health care (2) In the absence or unavailability of a living spouse, any parent,
whether an adult or a minor, for his or her minor child; (3) Any married person, whether an adult or a minor, for himself or
herself and for his or her spouse;
Default Surrogate Decisionmakers II
(4) Any person temporarily standing in loco parentis, whether formally
serving or not, for the minor under his or her care; and any guardian, for his or
her ward; (5) Any female, regardless of age or marital status, for herself when
given in connection with pregnancy, or the prevention thereof, or childbirth;
or (6) Others (A) Any adult child for his or her parents; (B) Any parent for his or her adult child; (C) Any adult for his or her brother or sister; or (D) Any grandparent for his or her grandchild. (E) Grandchild (F) Niece, nephew, aunt, or uncle Treatment which the patient would have wanted had the patient
understood the circumstances under which such treatment or procedures are provided.
Medical Consent in Minors
Under the age of 18 may consent to: Treatment for drug abuse HIV testing Prevention of pregnancy Treatment during pregnancy and childbirth Treatment for STD Abortion with parental notification
Informed Consent
Not just a piece of paperInformed consent is a means of engaging a
patient in important health care decisionsThere is therapeutic value to true informed
consent
Exceptions to Informed Consent
Emergency exceptions to informed consent Consent is implied in emergency when patient is lacks
capacity and surrogate unavailableTherapeutic privilegeWhat is Rule #1?Rule #1 - We are doctors, not lawyers
Confidentiality
What I may see or hear in the course of the treatment or even outside of the treatment in regard to the life of men, which on no account one must spread abroad, I will keep to myself Hippocrates
Confidentiality
Confidentiality is the obligation on the physician not to reveal what has been learned during the course of treatment
Privilege is the right of a patient, established only by statute, whereby a patient may prevent his physician from testifying. Privilege is a legal right belonging only to the patient and not to the physician.
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) 1996
Title II: Preventing Health Care Fraud and Abuse; Administrative Simplification; Medical Liability Reform Intent to restrict release of information to only that
necessary to achieve the purpose Patients are guaranteed access to their medical records
and may amend Not “psychotherapy” notes
What about disclosing information to a family member in an emergency? Consent not required if disclosure necessary for
treatment Notification of family may be necessary for treatment Rule #1
Subpoena Duces Tecum
Immediate response: Reply, don’t comply
Check with patientGet legal advice if
neededRelease minimum
information necessary
Breaking Confidentiality
Reporting child abuse or neglectAbuse of seniorsAbuse of disabledResidents of long term care facilitiesReporting HIV to stateNotifying sexual partners of HIV (permissive)“Tarasoff” warnings
“protective privilege ends where the public peril begins”
Duty to protect identfiable third parties at imminent risk
No law in Georgia
What does it mean to be professional?
As a preclinical student? Prepared On time Respectful
As a clinical student? Appearance Prepared On time Respectful
Nurses Extra duty
Some Characteristics of a “Professional”
Self-regulatingSpecialized education, training, knowledge
CompetenceBehaviors
Dress Timeliness Preparedness Courtesy Hard working
On Entering a Profession
An oath is taken pledging to uphold the standards of that profession
The Oath of Geneva AT THE TIME OF BEING ADMITTED AS A MEMBER OF THE MEDICAL PROFESSION: I SOLEMNLY PLEDGE myself to consecrate my life to the service of humanity; I WILL GIVE to my teachers the respect and gratitude which is their due; I WILL PRACTICE my profession with conscience and dignity; THE HEALTH OF MY PATIENT will be my first consideration; I WILL RESPECT the secrets which are confided in me, even after a patient has died; I WILL REMAIN by all means in my power, the honor and the noble traditions of the medical profession; MY COLLEAGUES will be my brothers and sisters; I WILL NOT PERMIT considerations of religion, nationality, race, party politics or social understanding to intervene between my duty and my patient; I WILL MAINTAIN the utmost respect for human life from its beginning, even under threat, and I will not use my medical knowledge contrary to the laws of humanity; I MAKE THESE PROMISES solemnly, freely and upon my honor.
“Consecrate My Life”
I SOLEMNLY PLEDGE myself to consecrate my life to the service of humanity
“Respect and Gratitude”
I WILL GIVE to my teachers the respect and gratitude which is their due
“Conscience and Dignity”
I WILL PRACTICE my profession with conscience and dignity
“My First Consideration”
THE HEALTH OF MY PATIENT will be my first consideration
“Confided in Me”
I WILL RESPECT the secrets which are confided in me, even after a patient has died
“Traditions”
I WILL REMAIN by all means in my power, the honor and the noble traditions of the medical profession
“Brothers and Sisters”
MY COLLEAGUES will be my brothers and sisters
No Other Considerations
I WILL NOT PERMIT considerations of religion, nationality, race, party politics or social understanding to intervene between my duty and my patient
“Respect for Human Life”
I WILL MAINTAIN the utmost respect for human life from its beginning, even under threat, and I will not use my medical knowledge contrary to the laws of humanity
“Promises”
I MAKE THESE PROMISES solemnly, freely and upon my honor.
The Oath of Geneva
Challenges to professionalism – But what about . . .?
Consecrate My Life
I SOLEMNLY PLEDGE myself to consecrate my life to the service of humanity What does it mean to “consecrate?” Are you ready when you come to class/rounds? Do you do just the minimum work required (e.g., number of
patients)? Resident work hours – what to do when you’ve reached the
limit and patient continuity of care or a learning might be compromised?
Will you take responsibility for your continuing education, attending meetings, reading journals, obtaining consultations?
Respect Teachers
I WILL GIVE to my teachers the respect and gratitude which is their due An attending asks you to suture a deep facial wound.
You have little experience with this and express your concern. The attending tells you “Well, this is how you learn” and leaves.
An attending asks you to obtain informed consent regarding a complex procedure with which you are unfamiliar and brushes aside your reservations about your ability to describe the procedure, its risks and benefits, prognosis, and alternatives.
An attending deliberately exposes parents of a newborn to a surgical procedure on their baby to demonstrate the futility of further intervention. They are devastated.
Conscience
I WILL PRACTICE my profession with conscience and dignity A recent graduate opens a primary care clinic
advertising itself as catering to gay and lesbian patients. It is one of very few clinics in this rural area. Residents who are not gay or lesbian are reluctant to visit the clinic.
A fertility specialist is approached by a woman who seeks to have six stored fertilized embryos implanted. She has six children at home.
A woman approaches you for advice about an elective abortion, to which you are opposed for religious reasons. Should you refer her to a colleague who performs abortions?
Health of My Patient
THE HEALTH OF MY PATIENT will be my first consideration Your patient comes to you for an exam prior to
traveling to Greece for his wedding. You discover him to have TB and express your concern over his trip.
A woman is brought by her husband to the EC with a history of severe depression, auditory hallucinations, and has been suicidal in the past. She gave birth six weeks ago to a health baby. She tells you “Whatever you do, don’t take my baby or make me come in the hospital. I couldn’t take it.” You are considering involuntary hospitalization (“commitment”).
Brothers and Sisters
MY COLLEAGUES will be my brothers and sisters Another student has been coming to groups late, lives
by himself, and there is concern among other students over his drinking and use of antianxiety (Xanax), pain, and stimulant medications.
During your EC and Internal medicine rotations you become aware of a community physician who seems to have a large number of patients coming to the hospital toxic on pain medications for which the indications are unclear, e.g., “fibromyalgia.”
Secrets
I WILL RESPECT the secrets which are confided in me, even after a patient has died Your patient is going through a painful divorce and, during
his annual physical examination, tells you “Sometimes I think the only way to protect the kids from her is just to get her out of picture entirely, if you know what I mean.”
Respect for Life
I WILL MAINTAIN the utmost respect for human life from its beginning, even under threat, and I will not use my medical knowledge contrary to the laws of humanity Patient Rights groups strongly support the “Death
with Dignity Act” in Oregon and seek to pass a similar law in Georgia. Your local legislator asks for your opinion.
Your hospital is considering a futility of care policy applicable to newborns and adults with severe medical conditions for which medical care is unlikely to provide anything but maintenance of vegetative functions. The policy would permit, after due process, termination of life supports over the objections of family.
Click icon to add pictureThreat to professionalismMangled care
Click icon to add pictureThreat to professionalismMedical Industry
Unprofessional Conduct and Board Action
235 MDs disciplined by board 1990-2003469 MDs controlled for school and year of
graduationDisciplined for:
Unprofessional conduct (74%) Incompetence Other
Papadakis et al. Disciplinary Action by Medical Boards and Prior Behavior in Medical School. NEJM 2005;353:2673-82
740 Board Violations by 235 Physicians
Use of drugs or alcohol 108Unprofessional conduct 82Conviction for a crime 46Negligence 42Prescribing/acquisition substances 39Violation of Board order/condition 32Sexual misconduct 29
Other – Failure to meet CME, fraud, billing, failure to maintain adequate records
Disciplined vs. Control Physicians
No gender differencesHighly significant differences (p< 0.05–
0.001) Medical school academic performance USMLE
Unprofessional conduct in school predicted subsequent disciplinary problems 39% of disciplined physicians displayed unprofessional
behaviors in school vs 19% of undisciplined physicians (disciplined physicians twice as likely to have records of unprofessional conduct during school)
P<0.001
Unprofessional Conduct in School
OR
Irresponsibility (>2) 8 Attendance, follow-up
Lack of self-improvement (>2) 3 Response to criticism
ImmaturityPoor initiative
Motivation, enthusiasmRelationships (students, nurses, faculty,
patients)
Lessons
Professionalism starts nowGood news – the two most significant
predictors are modifiable If you have problems with attendance, preparedness –
change! If you have a problem accepting criticism – learn!
Smiling inward is deadly
GroupsPrepare as a professional
Read the cases
Analyze using case analysis format
Discuss with colleagues as you like
Optional Review of First Meeting
What is an ethical dilemma?Conflict between or among moral imperativesPrinciples of medical ethicsAutonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence,
justiceProcedure for ethical case analysisRule #1, stakeholders, relevant laws,
potential consultants, possible decisions, proposed resolution
Review
What ethical principle is the basis for informed consent?
AutonomyKaren Ann Quinlan and Nancy Cruzan casesRight to priacy, right to die What legislation resulted from the Nancy
Cruzan case?Patient Self-Determination ActTarasoff is about:Duty to protect third parties at imminent risk
The principle of autonomy in medical ethics concerns the patient’s
Right to determine what shall be done to her own body
A capacity determination isA judgment about the patient’s ability to
make a particular decision about her medical care
Which three elements comprise valid, informed consent?
Competence, relevant information, voluntary
Informed consent from a patient for a surgical procedure, the standard in Georgia for disclosure of risks includes material risks which are
Accepted by reasonably prudent physicians that would cause a reasonably prudent patient in similar circumstances to refuse the procedure
When a decision must be made about the medical care of an adult patient who has had, but who no longer has, decision-making capacity, which standard should be used?
Substituted judgment
Which law led to the requirement that hospitals ask about the presence of Advance Directives?
Patient Self-Determination Act The Oath of Hippocrates includes which of
the following?A warning to keep secret knowledge
learned from professional contacts as well as knowledge learned “in the daily commerce with men”
Steps in Ethical Case Analysis
Principles of Medical Ethics
Which of the following is NOT widely considered a principle of medical ethics? Autonomy Beneficence Respect Social justice Non-Malfeasance
HIPAA
HIPAA is an important piece of federal legislation covering: Privacy of health care information Treatment in emergency rooms The right to privacy in medical decisionmaking
Mandatory Disclosure
In which of the following cases is disclosure of information NOT required: Suspected child abuse New HIV patient Receipt of a subpoena for medical records to be used
at a divorce proceeding Previously undisclosed criminal history
Match case with the concept most closely identified with it
National attention on “right to die” and removal of life sustaining devices
Duty to protect third parties
Removal of feeding tube, Patient Self Determination Act
TarasoffNancy CruzanKaren Ann Quinlan
Autonomy
The principle of autonomy concerns the patient’s Right to be treated with compassion Right to determine what shall be done with one’s
body Right to basic medical care Right to drive an automobile
Capacity (competence)
A capacity determination is A judgment about the patient’s ability to be a
good patient A judgment about the patient’s ability to make
good decisions in general A judgment about the patient’s ability to make
good medical decisions A judgment about the patient’s ability to make a
particular decision about her medical care
Which is the more acceptable view?
Providing the degree of information necessary for genuine informed consent is understood to require Disclosing what a reasonable physician would
disclose in the circumstances Disclosing information that a reasonable person
in those circumstances would judge relevant Both
Best Interests or Substituted Judgment?
When a decision must be made about the medical care of an adult patient who has had, but who no longer has, decisionmaking capacity, the surrogate decisionmaker should Use the “best interest” standard to reach a
decision, i.e., what, in the opinion of the surrogate decisionmaker is in the best interests of the patient
Use the “substituted judgment” standard to reach a decision, i.e., what the patient would have decided if competent
Best Interests or Substituted Judgment?
When a decision must be made about the medical care of a patient who never had decisionmaking capacity, the surrogate decisionmaker should Use the “best interest” standard to reach a
decision, i.e., what, in the opinion of the surrogate decisionmaker is in the best interests of the patient
Use the “substituted judgment” standard to reach a decision, i.e., what the patient would have decided if competent
Neither a nor b
Informed Consent
Which of the following is NOT one of the three elements of a valid informed consent? Information Confidentiality Voluntariness Competence Witnessed
Minors and Medical Decisions
To which medical decisions may a minor in Georgia give consent? Drug abuse treatment STD Treatment of the minor’s child Pregnancy Prevention of pregnancy Abortion with parental notification (except emergency
or with court approval)
Click icon to add pictureThreats to professionalism“Alternative health care”Social justice and lack of access
Questions?