The 4-Box Method of Clinical Ethics-Prof Hakimi
The 4-Box Method of Clinical Ethics-Prof Hakimi
The 4-Box Method of Clinical Ethics-Prof Hakimi
of Clinical Ethics:
Medical Indications
Case Presentation:
Maternal-Fetal Conflict
University of Washington School of Medicine
http://depts.washington.edu/bioethx/topics/matern.html
Case Presentation:
Maternal-Fetal Conflict
The patient declined the recommendation to
induce labor, and also refused to present for
any further monitoring. She stated that she
did not believe in medical interventions.
Nevertheless, she continued with her prenatal
visits. At 41 weeks, she submitted to a further
AFI, which was found to be 1.8 cm. She and
her husband continued to decline the
recommendation for induced labor.
Case Presentation:
Maternal-Fetal Conflict
Which ethical duty takes precedence, the duty
to respect the patient's autonomous decision,
or the duty to benefit a viable fetus?
Is induction of labor a harmful intervention,
subject to the principle of nonmaleficence?
Client Preferences:
Quality of Life:
Contextual Features:
BenefitRisk Ratio
The principles of beneficence and nonmaleficence do
not merely instruct the clinician to help and do no
harm; they coalesce to guide the clinician's
assessment of how much risk is justified by the
intended benefit.
A physician must calculate this "ratio" and fashion it
into a recommendation to the patient who will, in
the last analysis, evaluate it in light of his or her own
values.