Ethics in Health Care
Ethics: are the study of standards that are right or wrong in human behavior
It is how people should behave, consider the rights and obligations, values of fairness, loyalty, and honesty
Ethics refers to a code of conduct among a people group
Morality and Morals
Morality: extends from a system of beliefs about what is right and what is wrong in how we behave in society
Morals can be said to define a person’s character
Values: give weight to the decisions we make in our everyday lives
people typically have different types of value that take precedence depending on the context
Sense of Duty: is given to all healthcare workers when a patient “lays claims to you” meaning you now must help them in a competent manner
Teleological Theory: an action as a right or wrong depending on the result it produced
Also known as the consequence-based theory
Deontological Theory: moral and honest action is taken regardless of the outcome
Deontology is developed from the word duty
Virtue Ethics
Looks at the ethical character of the person making the decision
Divine Command: follows philosophies and rules set out by a higher power
Beneficence and Nonmaleficence
Beneficence: guides the process towards a morally right outcome
Nonmaleficence: to cause no harm
Beneficence is to do right and avoid harm when possible
Respect: all patients have the right to be treated respectfully
Respect is a general right in the healthcare industry
Autonomy: self-governance
To the ability to make informed decisions while given all the facts
Patients have the right to choose their course of treatment
Truthfulness: the quality of being honest and not containing or telling any lies
Fidelity
Required faithfulness and loyalty
Makes healthcare providers adhere to their professional code of ethics and the principles that define their roles and scopes of practice
Justice
There are three types of justice
Distributive: deals with the proper and equitable distribution of healthcare resources
Compensatory: relates to the paying of compensation for wrongdoing
Procedural: acting in a first come first serve manner
The Canadian Health Act assures everyone has equal access to the same prepaid healthcare
Rights in health care
Rights are entitlements or things that should be expected of healthcare providers
They may be tangible or intangible
Tangible rights are those that are measurable and physical
Intangible rights are vaguer like being treated with respect and dignity
Canadians have the Right to Healthcare
grey areas in the way of IVF treatments
Canadians should have the right to timely healthcare
having reasonable wait times for both urgent and non-urgent healthcare
Duties and Rights
If a patient has a right within or to healthcare then a healthcare provider is obligated to give it to them
Patients also have the right to make decisions for themselves and not be judged for them
Truthfulness: all patients have the right to the truth
Patient-focused care requires physicians to keep the patient fully and truthfully informed
CODE OF ETHICS
Special Boundaries and Relationships
With patients, personal relationships with patients are strictly prohibited.
Generally speaking, most doctors are not allowed to date patients for a whole year after they see them professionally
Though not as strict most medical professions have rules about seeing patients outside of work
With colleagues friendships between colleagues are natural.
As long as it does not get in the way of work it is not considered unethical
In the hospital setting everyone is expected to act professional
Rationale for Boundaries
Patients trust when they go see a healthcare professional they trust them to do their job impartially and competently
Balance of Power and Transference
Going to get help is a vulnerable thing and some patients mistake a doctor’s professional interaction and have a sense of “falling in love” in some instances the doctor has to remove themselves from the care of that patient
Euthanasia
Voluntary euthanasia: when a person causes the death of another person with the dying person’s consent
Voluntary euthanasia: when a person causes the death of a dying person without consent
Active euthanasia: is taking deliberate steps in taking someone’s life
Passing euthanasia: allowing a person to die by taking away medical support
Ethical Principles and Medical Assistance in Dying
Rights: A person’s right to self-determination is central when it comes to medical ethics
Autonomy: The patient has to be mentally competent to make such a decision
Values: When it is ethically right or wrong one’s self-dignity has to come into play
Trust
DNR
Must be signed by a doctor
Advanced directive can also be made such as a living Will or treatment directive____: it specifies the nature and level of treatment a person would want to receive when they are not capable of understanding the entirety of the situation
Levels of Care
Level 1 & 2 are congruent
The resident wishes to stay in their home (e.g. long-term care or nursing home), receiving comfort and supportive measures only. This includes pain control, but not usually intra- venous therapy for hydration.
The resident wants to stay in the facility and receive all treatments, medications, and interventions that are possible at the facility. This would include pain control and antibiotics if the patient developed an infection, pneumonia, or a urinary tract infection. Other medications may include those to treat cardiovascular problems. Intravenous hydration may or may not be considered.
Level 3
A resident choosing this level of care would be transferred to an acute care facility from their long-term care facility. They would receive recommended imaging and diagnostic tests, an intravenous if required, antibiotics, and other medications as needed. Level 3 does not include CPR protocol, or transfer to the intensive care unit.
Level 4
This level requires the person to be transferred to an acute care facility for all active measures required to sustain life.
Ethics: are the study of standards that are right or wrong in human behavior
It is how people should behave, consider the rights and obligations, values of fairness, loyalty, and honesty
Ethics refers to a code of conduct among a people group
Morality and Morals
Morality: extends from a system of beliefs about what is right and what is wrong in how we behave in society
Morals can be said to define a person’s character
Values: give weight to the decisions we make in our everyday lives
people typically have different types of value that take precedence depending on the context
Sense of Duty: is given to all healthcare workers when a patient “lays claims to you” meaning you now must help them in a competent manner
Teleological Theory: an action as a right or wrong depending on the result it produced
Also known as the consequence-based theory
Deontological Theory: moral and honest action is taken regardless of the outcome
Deontology is developed from the word duty
Virtue Ethics
Looks at the ethical character of the person making the decision
Divine Command: follows philosophies and rules set out by a higher power
Beneficence and Nonmaleficence
Beneficence: guides the process towards a morally right outcome
Nonmaleficence: to cause no harm
Beneficence is to do right and avoid harm when possible
Respect: all patients have the right to be treated respectfully
Respect is a general right in the healthcare industry
Autonomy: self-governance
To the ability to make informed decisions while given all the facts
Patients have the right to choose their course of treatment
Truthfulness: the quality of being honest and not containing or telling any lies
Fidelity
Required faithfulness and loyalty
Makes healthcare providers adhere to their professional code of ethics and the principles that define their roles and scopes of practice
Justice
There are three types of justice
Distributive: deals with the proper and equitable distribution of healthcare resources
Compensatory: relates to the paying of compensation for wrongdoing
Procedural: acting in a first come first serve manner
The Canadian Health Act assures everyone has equal access to the same prepaid healthcare
Rights in health care
Rights are entitlements or things that should be expected of healthcare providers
They may be tangible or intangible
Tangible rights are those that are measurable and physical
Intangible rights are vaguer like being treated with respect and dignity
Canadians have the Right to Healthcare
grey areas in the way of IVF treatments
Canadians should have the right to timely healthcare
having reasonable wait times for both urgent and non-urgent healthcare
Duties and Rights
If a patient has a right within or to healthcare then a healthcare provider is obligated to give it to them
Patients also have the right to make decisions for themselves and not be judged for them
Truthfulness: all patients have the right to the truth
Patient-focused care requires physicians to keep the patient fully and truthfully informed
CODE OF ETHICS
Special Boundaries and Relationships
With patients, personal relationships with patients are strictly prohibited.
Generally speaking, most doctors are not allowed to date patients for a whole year after they see them professionally
Though not as strict most medical professions have rules about seeing patients outside of work
With colleagues friendships between colleagues are natural.
As long as it does not get in the way of work it is not considered unethical
In the hospital setting everyone is expected to act professional
Rationale for Boundaries
Patients trust when they go see a healthcare professional they trust them to do their job impartially and competently
Balance of Power and Transference
Going to get help is a vulnerable thing and some patients mistake a doctor’s professional interaction and have a sense of “falling in love” in some instances the doctor has to remove themselves from the care of that patient
Euthanasia
Voluntary euthanasia: when a person causes the death of another person with the dying person’s consent
Voluntary euthanasia: when a person causes the death of a dying person without consent
Active euthanasia: is taking deliberate steps in taking someone’s life
Passing euthanasia: allowing a person to die by taking away medical support
Ethical Principles and Medical Assistance in Dying
Rights: A person’s right to self-determination is central when it comes to medical ethics
Autonomy: The patient has to be mentally competent to make such a decision
Values: When it is ethically right or wrong one’s self-dignity has to come into play
Trust
DNR
Must be signed by a doctor
Advanced directive can also be made such as a living Will or treatment directive____: it specifies the nature and level of treatment a person would want to receive when they are not capable of understanding the entirety of the situation
Levels of Care
Level 1 & 2 are congruent
The resident wishes to stay in their home (e.g. long-term care or nursing home), receiving comfort and supportive measures only. This includes pain control, but not usually intra- venous therapy for hydration.
The resident wants to stay in the facility and receive all treatments, medications, and interventions that are possible at the facility. This would include pain control and antibiotics if the patient developed an infection, pneumonia, or a urinary tract infection. Other medications may include those to treat cardiovascular problems. Intravenous hydration may or may not be considered.
Level 3
A resident choosing this level of care would be transferred to an acute care facility from their long-term care facility. They would receive recommended imaging and diagnostic tests, an intravenous if required, antibiotics, and other medications as needed. Level 3 does not include CPR protocol, or transfer to the intensive care unit.
Level 4
This level requires the person to be transferred to an acute care facility for all active measures required to sustain life.