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Ethics Committee Structures

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Ethics Committee Structures & Decision Making Models Philip Boyle, Ph.D. Vice President, Ethics www.CHE.ORG/ETHICS Goals for today s conversation House keeping ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethics Committee Structures


1
  • Ethics Committee Structures
  • Decision Making Models
  • Philip Boyle, Ph.D.
  • Vice President, Ethics
  • www.CHE.ORG/ETHICS

2
Goals for todays conversation
  • House keeping review of course
  • Expectations
  • Different ethics mechanisms
  • The Next Generation
  • Nature of ethics
  • Evaluation of ethics functioning
  • Nature of ethical decision making
  • Values-based decision-making process

3
Etiquette
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4
Case of Mrs. White
  • 82 year old
  • Found unconscious at home
  • Placed on vent
  • 3 days later awake
  • Take me off vent, I want coffee
  • Listen to my son
  • MD refuses
  • Ethics consultation provide info on state law

5
Nature of ethics consultation?
  • How would you describe the actions?
  • Recommending?
  • Consultation?
  • Mandating?
  • What do these verbs connote? Are any antithetical
    to the nature of ethics?
  • What is the authority of the EC?

6
Nature of ethics
  • Goal
  • Compliance
  • Ethics is good business/practice
  • Doing good, avoid evil
  • Human flourishing
  • Facilitating the decision maker to make a good
    decision

7
Ethics MechanismsBefore and After
  • Beforein the beginning
  • Largely grass roots
  • Not hard wired to administration
  • Focused on patients rights
  • Philosophical discussion of hard cases
  • Dispute resolution forums

8
Process
  • Scope of jurisdiction and authority
  • What authority do they have?
  • What is the authority of the education?
  • What is the authority of the consultation?
  • What is there authority on policy review?
  • Are there any functions that the committee will
    never accept?
  • Could some other existent committee better handle
    this request? Are we duplicating functions?
  • Who calls the committee into being?
  • To whom does the committee report?
  • The nature of ethics committeessafe place for
    unsafe ideas
  • Confidentiality
  • Functional consensus

9
Functions
  • Education
  • Will only certain groups be targeted?
  • What formats will be best for the various groups?
  • What is the expected outcome for education?
    Changed behavior? Provision of guidelines?
    Standards of practice?
  • In a pluralistic society, where there is little
    agreement on ethical issues, what information can
    be presented?
  • How does education avoid appearance of mandating?

10
Functions
  • Policy
  • Should the policy come from the ethics committee
    or from another group?
  • Should the committee merely review policy, or
    help develop it? What is the extent of the
    authority given to the committee in policy
    making? What are the pros and cons?

11
Functions
  • Case consultation
  • At what point in an ethics committee's
    functioning should it provide case consultation?
  • Should it provide prospective and retrospective
    consultation?
  • Should the consultation be binding? What if the
    entire committee agrees but the person asking for
    the consultation disagrees?
  • Who can ask for a consultation?
  • Who decides whether the consultation comes before
    the committee?
  • Should there be an ad hoc subcommittee on call to
    consider ethical problems that arise?
  • Should the subcommittee follow standard pattern
    of consultation?
  • Shall the consultations be noted in the chart?

12
Functions
  • Advocacy
  • To what extent should community education efforts
    advocate one position or another?
  • Should the committee become involved with
    political advocacy for the passage of a bill?

13
  • Who should have access to the ethics committee?
  • Physicians only?
  • Nurses after they have exhausted existing
    channels?
  • All staff?
  • Patients? Family?
  • Community members?

14
  • How will people know about the committee and
    access it?
  • Through the chairperson only?
  • Through any member of the committee?
  • Through department heads?
  • By request of physicians or administration, or
    merely by asking to be put on the agenda?

15
Priorities
  • Priorities What substantive issues are most
    important to the institution? Long range planning
  • How broad shall the committee cast its nets?
  • Should it consider social issues i.e., rationing?
  • Should the committee consider business ethics?
  • How much time will be allotted to diversions from
    designated goals to talk about issues such as
    procedure?
  • What are our priority functions?
  • What are our priority substantive issues?
  • What is our 1 and 3 year plan?
  • How will and when will we evaluate them?

16
AfterEthics Mechanisms The Next Generation
  • Integrating Healthcare Ethics into Healthcare
    Operations
  • Holding Ethics Mechanisms Accountable
  • Ethics Mechanisms Going from Good to Great
  • Ethics as Mission Reflection A Spirituality at
    Work

17
Notable successes
  • Self education
  • First responders
  • Ethics Champions
  • Safe-place for unsafe ideas
  • Identifiable institutional response
  • Participative collaborative

18
Notable failures?
  • Limited to clinical ethics
  • Lack of demonstrable value/effectiveness
  • Good intentions value
  • Stuck on hard cases
  • Doing ethics talking about ethics
  • Volunteers amateurs
  • Consistency in action
  • Dispute resolution forums with no power or
    training in arbitration

19
How can we respond to the record?
  • Improving? Refining?
  • New slant on consultations e.g., organizational
    ethics?
  • Enhance policy development for management tool?
  • New pedagogy to shape professionals or new sexy
    topics e.g., face transplants?

20
Experience/ History
  • Disillusionment
  • Are ECs making a demonstrable difference in pt
    care?
  • Quasi-legal protection of pt rights
  • Operating dispute resolution forums with little
    power of training in arbitration

21
How can we respond to the record?
  • The Next Generation
  • Proactive agent of system change
  • Better integrated
  • Upstream
  • Improved Pt care
  • Adds value contributes to quality
  • Integrated Mission Reflection

22
What does this mean practically?
  • Mission Vision
  • May be articulated, often not
  • Source of conflict
  • Clear mission vision
  • Catalyst facilitator for systemic change
  • Not principle vehicle for change

23
What does this mean functionally?
  • Ethics Resource Service (ERS)
  • Clinical Consultation Group
  • Facilitates Cases
  • Educational Forums
  • Healthcare Ethics Committee (HEC)
  • Integrates ethics into quality
  • Operationally minded
  • Measures outcomes, hold accountable

24
Membership
  • Selecting qualified members, not location
  • Core education
  • Trained in conflict resolution
  • Escape appearance of volunteers
  • Long-range training

25
Modes Methods of Operation
  • Focus is operations, not philosophical discourse
  • Skill-set operational accomplishment
  • How to get things done
  • How to bring about change
  • How to facilitate org development

26
Ethics Resource Service
  • 1. Provide competent informational
    decision-making support
  • Consultation mechanism
  • Core knowledge
  • Dispute resolution
  • 2. Advise HEC on recurring issues
  • Systemic/structural solutions

27
Total Quality ImprovementOperationally
Integrating Ethics
  • Trending
  • Values-based Decision-making Process
  • Indicators/Trigger Mechanisms
  • Committee self-evaluation

28
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30
Why use it?
  • Consistent evidence of supporting Mission
  • Evidence of Participation and Respect for Persons
  • Evidence that the Spirit has guided
  • Checks Balances
  • Fosters habit of moral reasoning

31
When to use it?
  • Formally
  • Decision that affect significant interests and
    populations
  • Opening Closing Services
  • Significant HR issues
  • Development of Strategic management tools
  • Informallyall moral decisions

32
Phase I Preparation
  • Number of persons/groups impacted
  • Does it affect a department or the institution?
  • Duration of the impact
  • Does the impact last a few years or the span of
    the ministry?
  • Depth or weight of impact
  • Does the question affect the entire ministry or
    a portion of it?
  • Closeness to Core Values
  • Does the question directly jeopardize a value?
  • Degree of complexity
  • Past commitments
  • Does the question positively or negatively affect
    past commitments?
  • Relationship to strategic direction

33
Whose interests are affected?
  • Based on the nature of the issue, what other
    individuals or groups need to be part of the
    process?
  • What is the nature and frequency of the
    connection between the groups and the question?
  • What departments will be affected?
  • What departments might have insight?
  • What other entities will be affected by the
    decision?
  • Who would have insights to the Mission and
    tradition as it applies to this decision?

34
Phase II Decision Making
  • Pray, reflect, identify question, and clarify
    authority of decision-making group.
  • Prayer and reflection are necessary because the
    group believes that it is Gods spirit that is
    guiding and perfecting the many decision-making
    talents brought to the table. A spirit of
    prayerful reflection centers the group on the
    fact that they are continuing the healing,
    transforming ministry of Jesus.
  • Identification of the question is essential
    because each decision maker will perceive and
    state the question differently. If the question
    is inaccurately identified at the outset of
    decision making, or not agreed upon, then the
    ensuing process will be counterproductive.
  • The decision-making group should be clear about
    its scope of authority. Do they have the ultimate
    decision-making authority, or are they a
    consultative group that provides information to
    the ultimate decision maker(s)?

35
Phase II Decision Making
  • 2. Determine primary and secondary communities of
    concern and their interests.
  • While there may be a large community of concern,
    not everyone in that community has the same
    interests. The decision-making group should
    assess the manner and degree to which a
    sub-community will be affected positively and/or
    negatively.
  • The decision-making group should consider how
    those who are poor and vulnerable will be
    affected by the decision.

36
Phase II Decision Making
  • 4. Identify key moral commitments and values, as
    well as conflicts among them.
  • Identify the question in terms of trade-offs
    between one or more values. For example, consider
    your decision in terms of human dignity and
    identify the dignity trade-offs in the various
    options that you are weighing.
  • Identify the major consequences of this dignity
    trade-off in terms of individuals and groups in
    terms of long- and short-term burdens and
    benefits or in terms of money, morale and
    relationships, etc.

37
Phase II Decision Making
  • 5. Establish priorities among commitments and
    values.
  • The moral commitments and values that deserve
    priority will flow from consideration of
    strategic goals/objectives, core values,
    historical commitments, the broader religious
    tradition, and special circumstances.
  • List each priority and provide the rationale for
    why it is a priority.

38
Phase II Decision Making
  • 6. Develop options that support the priorities.
  • Identify options that promote the moral
    commitments and values deserving priority.
  • Examine carefully the major options and evaluate
    the positive and negative consequences of these
    options on the identified priorities.
  • Consider not only the burdens and benefits of the
    preferred option but all of the options.
  • Do any of the options preserve and protect a
    majority of the identified priorities?

39
Phase II Decision Making
  • 7. In silence reflect and then listen to
    viewpoints.
  • To ensure that the Spirit has guided the
    discussion and to promote the voice of any
    reservations or opposition, a quiet time of
    reflection should be offered during which group
    members consider the discussion in light of the
    faith tradition and personal conviction.
  • Consider the following reflective questions
  • Have I listened to the facts and appreciated the
    viewpoints of others?
  • Have I opened myself to the workings of the
    Spirit?
  • Have I sought the good of the entire ministry and
    then the particular good of others?
  • Has input been elicited from all decision makers?

40
Phase II Decision Making
  • 8. Gain consensus on decision.
  • Invite all members to express which option should
    be pursued and why. Discussion should be held
    until every member has had an opportunity to
    voice an opinion.
  • At the conclusion of the participatory decision
    making, estimate if a consensus exists, and if
    not, identify the points of disagreement and
    allow for additional conversation for
    clarification.
  • If a consensus is reached, identify the values
    that will suffer because of the choice. Discuss
    how to mitigate the harms.

41
Phase III Follow Through
  • Assign accountabilities to specific persons for
    each component to be realized.
  • Build a plan for monitoring and reporting with
    measurable outcomes.
  • Build a communication plan for community of
    concern with key messages and methods.
  • Build a plan that connects to the larger meaning
    and purpose.

42
Conclusions
  • One needs to first clarify the nature of ethics
  • Then focus on the nature of facilitation
  • Core knowledge
  • Competencies for facilitation
  • Proper use of values-based decision making
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