Title: Surgical Ethics: Relationships with Patients, the Profession, and Society
1Surgical EthicsRelationships with Patients,the
Profession, and Society
- Martin McKneallyUniversity of TorontoDept. of
Surgery - Joint Centre fo Bioethics
- Foundations of Surgery
- September 25, 2012
2- Dr. McKneally, this is Jerry Wilson of the FBI.
Can you answer some questions for me? - What kind of ethics education or training is
given to surgeons? -
- The Moon/Realyvasquez case
3Doctors accused of performing unnecessary heart
surgeries at Redding Medical Center agree to pay
millions to settle fraud allegations and accept
restrictions on their medical practice
- U.S. Department of Justice, 2005
4Plan of talk
- Whats an Ethic?
- Teaching Ethics
- The Ethic of Surgery
- Obligations
- to patients
- to the team
- to society
5Ethics.Whats an Ethic?
- A set of values, principles, and beliefs,
standards of conduct - Guides the behaviour of a specified group
journalists, lawyers, mafiosi, monks, physicians,
surgeons. - What we should do codes of conduct
6Ethics
should
Policy
Law
usually
must
7Ethics
censure
Policy
Law
disapproval
fines/prison
8Contemplation before surgery Joe Wilder, MD
9Thou Shalt Teach Bioethics
10Ethical Issues Taught FormallyConsent,
end-of-life, disclosure, surgical competence,
surgical decision-making, COI, resource
allocation, research/innovation
- Ethical Challenges Not in Formal Curriculum
- Intra- and inter-professional conflict, lack of
experience, training issues, perceived unethical
staff behaviour
11Ethic of Surgery
- Trustworthiness
- Competence
- Commitment
12Trustworthiness
- We are trusted to live up to our obligations
- Professional competence, commitment
- Fiduciary what is best for the patient
- Team integrity, coworker care
- Societal community need for surgical care
13Surgical Competence
- Knowledge - timely and appropriate
- Judgment - balanced
- - attentive to the particular needs and
circumstances of the individual patient - - the right operation for the right
patient at the right time - Technical Skill - sufficient to perform the
surgical intervention - - minimum of risk
- - high probability of benefit
14Commitment
Personal responsibility uniquely
intensified Constancy warrior energy
15Fiduciary Obligation
- Put patients interests above all others,
including the physicians - Trustworthy care
- competence, commitment
- Respect
- dignitary rights
- privacy, confidentiality
16Confidentiality
- Patients and the profession expect physicians not
to disclose private information learned in the
course of care
17Team Obligations
- Maintaining the integrity of the team
- Coworker care attention to the needs and
concerns of team members
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19Societal Obligations
- Implicit contract with society
- Duty to treat
- Explicit contract
- with individual patient
- emergency care
- public agencies
- Challenges AIDS, SARS, Avian flu,
- COI, hypocompetent surgical care,
- suboptimal system of care
20Societal Obligations of Surgeons
- Effective subsystems of care
- Trauma system
- Cardiac Care Network
- Cancer Care Ontario
- CritiCall
21Societal Obligations of Surgeons
- Developing subsystems
- Coaching teams
- Critical care Tom Stewart
- General surgery Ori Rotstein, Andy Smith,
Bernie Langer, Richard Reznick - Orthopaedics Alan Gross
Coach Alan Hudson
22Summary Ethic of Surgery
- Trustworthiness
- Competence
- Commitment
- Obligations
- Patients
- Team
- Society
-
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24- martin.mckneally_at_utoronto.ca
- Cell 416.918.5032
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26Ethical Issues Taught FormallyConsent,
end-of-life, disclosure, surgical competence,
surgical decision-making, COI, resource
allocation, research/innovation
- Ethical Challenges Not in Formal Curriculum
- Intra- and inter-professional conflict, lack of
experience, training issues, perceived unethical
staff behaviour
27RCPSC Bioethics Curriculum Surgery
- Consent
- Capacity, Disclosure, Surrogates
- Professional Conduct
- Duty to treat, Confidentiality
- Conflict of Interest
- Surgical Competence
- End of Life
- Truth Telling
- Resource Allocation
- Research Ethics
28Circumstance Culture Religion Politics
Ethics
should
Policy
Law
must
usually