27716335
27716335
27716335
Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .
http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp
.
JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of
content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms
of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact support@jstor.org.
BMJ is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to Journal of Medical Ethics.
http://www.jstor.org
Andrew Smith Department of Family and Community Medicine, Newcastle upon Tyne University
and Community Medicine In the third term of the first pre-clinical year medical
the Family Department
a common chronic medical ethics is introduced in a formal lecture about its
who is suffering from
condition such as stroke or rheumatoid arthritis, is principles. This is followed by two practic?is in the
in the lecture theatre to the class. He or she first of which a film is shown of a neonatal paediatrician
introduced
and one of the clinical tutors a baby with
is then taken through the history of his illness, by his examining
and then questioned the students about how it spina bifida. The extent of the deformity is
GP, by
next weeks of demonstrated and its effect on the baby's function and
affects his life. Within the few pairs
are introduced in her home to a patient development discussed by the two doctors. Possible
students
a baby within the next three months. Her GP options are put to the students. Should this infant be
expecting
which upon or allowed to die in the ward, or taken
has explained to her the object of the attachment operated
is about people. home by the parents to have palliative treatment when
is to teach students that medicine They
as a necessary? What is the parents' reaction to their baby's
may be ill or anxiousor, case, in her
expecting
What to be said to them? An
baby. It is not just about disease. Her job, we tell the deformity. ought
to treat academic so far. Then the question is posed to
expectant mother, is to help the students question
the assembled class: 'Put yourself in the position of the
as people and to be sensitive to their worries
patients
and fears. paediatrician you have just seen in the film. What
the task with would you say to the parents, who must decide their
The pregnant patients accept
when we tell them that we are child's fate, remembering that most parents will rely
enthusiasm especially
to their heavily upon their doctor's advice? Any one of you
trying to produce doctors who will respond
needs. This strikes a chord. all might some day be the doctor in a similar situation.
patients' Nearly
at some time or another, had experience How would you deal with it?'
patients have,
doctors. We that the Open discussion is then encouraged in the lecture
of impersonal mechanical explain
theatre during which viewpoints range from the belief
Key words that every possible operation ought to be done to keep
ethics medical ethics. the baby alive at one extreme, to the belief that the
Medical teaching;
child ought to be allowed to die at the other. withhold antibiotics if they get an infection.
Emotions aroused and arguments within In vitro fertilisation seems likely to be a major issue
by questions
the lecture theatre are often heated. The students then next term.
break into their GP tutorial where the Students realise that ethical issues are considerably
groups
discussion continues. They have spent three terms easier in the abstract than in real life. The Roman
normal pregnancy and childbirth over the Catholic who starts with absolute certainty that
studying
to
past year and are suddenly confronted by a severely termination of pregnancy is always wrong begins
infant and one whose fate a his opinion when faced with a 40-year-old
handicapped requires modify
decision. This is reality, not theory any longer. They woman or a 15-year-old girl asking for termination.
are made to face a situation which cannot be solved by The rational aetheist begins to wonder if he isn't being
science. Why not? Medicine is a science, or so they too casual about the fate of an unborn child.
have been is a decision In the course
of these two years the concept of the
always told, yet here which will
on the emotional, and moral views of sanctity of life, absolute or relative, the autonomy of
depend religious
parents and doctors. It adds a new dimension to the the patient, the rights of the unborn infant and other
of medicine. issues on which doctors have conflicting views, are
study
discussed and seen not to be subjects for religious
In the second pre-clinical year each pair of students
or iconoclasm or emotions or
is attached to a patient with a chronic disease whom dogma agnostic
prejudice. It is fascinating to watch the changes in
they visit several times. Other ethical issues arise. The
individual students' viewpoints and the maturing of
concept of the autonomy of the patient is one of them.
a particular their attitudes to non-scientific issues.
Should not patient be in sheltered
What sort of medical ethics are we teaching or,
accommodation? Ideally he should but he has always
rather, helping students to think about and discuss? It
been a loner and resists all attempts to persuade him to
must vary with the bias of individual tutors. Mine is
leave his home. But his house is filthy and he abuses
towards the ethics of society as expressed by
neighbours when they complain of the stench. They go
to the social workers who call in the GP. Is there not a Parliament, just as another's may be towards Roman
medical reason for this man's antisocial behaviour? Catholic dogma. Our aim is to encourage students to
Patients raise the of euthanasia. Some including moral philosophers, theologians and
question
the declaration academic lawyers like Ian Kennedy who first publicly
actually produce formal advocated by
the euthanasia Others ask their GP not to questioned the right of doctors to decide their own
lobby.
resuscitate them if they have a heart attack or to professional ethics without consulting those other
people who are their patients.