EditKaidah Dasar Bioetik &
EditKaidah Dasar Bioetik &
EditKaidah Dasar Bioetik &
Content:
Definition Approached to bioethics Principles of bioethics / kaidah dasar bioetik Prima facie
Definition:
THE DISCIPLINE DEALING WITH WHAT IS GOOD AND BAD AND WITH MORAL DUTY AND OBLIGATION (Websters). ETHICS OFFERS CONCEPTUAL TOOLS TO EVALUATE AND GUIDE MORAL DECISION MAKING MEDICAL ETHICS IS A DISCIPLINE / METHODOLOGY FOR CONSIDERING THE IMPLICATIONS OF MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY / TREATMENT AND WHAT OUGHT TO BE (Univ of Washington School of Medicine)
Ethics can be described as a sub-branch of applied philosophy that seeks what are the right and the wrong, the good and the bad set of behaviours in a given circumstance
Bioethics is a quasi-social science that offers solutions to the moral conflicts that arise in medical and biological science practice.
The Four Principles of Bioethics in 13th Century Muslim Scholar Maulanas Teachings,Sahin Aksoy,Faculty of Medicine,Dept Med Ethics & History of Medicine,Turki.
Bioetika:
Berperan penting dalam menjamin kehormatan harkat dan martabat manusia (respect for human dignity), perlindungan hak-hak asasi manusia dan kebebasan-kebebasan dasar. Mencakup dimensi etika, hukum, sosial dan budaya ilmu-ilmu hayati dan juga teknologi yang terkait.
Rangkuman Pembahasan Kelompok Kerja Komisi Bioetika Nasional 2004-2007.
Ethics is : the study of morality careful and systematic reflection on and analysis of moral decisions and behaviour, whether past, present or future. Morality is : the value dimension of human decisionmaking and behaviour.
Since ethics deals with all aspects of human behaviour and decision-making, it is a very large and complex field of study with many branches or subdivisions.
Medical ethics is the branch of ethics that deals with moral issues in medical practice. Medical ethics is closely related, but not identical to, bioethics (biomedical ethics).
Medical ethics focuses primarily on issues arising out of the practice of medicine.
Bioethics is a very broad subject that is concerned with the moral issues raised by developments in the biological sciences more generally.
The study of ethics prepares medical students to recognize difficult situations and to deal with them in a rational and principled manner.
Ethics is also important in physicians interactions with society and their colleagues and for the conduct of medical research.
From Hippocrates came the concept of medicine as a profession, whereby physicians make a public promise that they will place the interests of their patients above their own interests.
In recent times medical ethics has been greatly influenced by developments in human rights. In a pluralistic and multicultural world, with many different moral traditions, the major international human rights agreements can provide a foundation for medical ethics that is acceptable across national and cultural boundaries.
Moreover, physicians frequently have to deal with medical problem resulting from violations of human rights, such as forced migration and torture.
Medical ethics is also closely related to law. In most countries there are laws that specify how physicians are required to deal with ethical issues in patient care and research. In addition, the medical licensing and regulatory officials in each country can and do punish physicians for ethical violations.
Consider the following medical cases, which could have taken place in almost any country :
1. Dr. P, an experienced and skilled surgeon, is about to finish night duty at a medium-sized community hospital. A young woman is brought to the hospital by her mother, who leaves immediately after telling the intake nurse that she has to look after her other children. The patient is bleeding vaginally and is in a great deal of pain. Dr. P examines her and decides that she has had either a miscarriage or a self-induced abortion. He does a quick dilatation and curettage and tells the nurse to ask the patient whether she can afford to stay in the hospital until it is safe for her to be discharged. Dr. Q comes in to replace Dr. P, who goes home without having spoken to the patient.
2. Dr. S is becoming increasingly frustrated with patients who come to her either before or after consulting another health practitioner for the same ailment. She considers this to be a waste of health resources as well as counter-productive for the health of the patients. She decides to tell these patients that she will no longer treat them if they continue to see other practitioners for the same ailment. She intends to approach her national medical association to lobby the government to prevent this form of misallocation of healthcare resources.
3. Dr. C, a newly appointed anaesthetist* in a city hospital, is larmed by the behaviour of the senior surgeon in the operating room. The surgeon uses out-ofdate techniques that prolong operations and result in greater post-operative pain and longer recovery times. Moreover, he makes frequent crude jokes about Medical Ethics Manual Introduction the patients that obviously bother the assisting nurses. As a more junior staff member, Dr. C is reluctant to criticize the surgeon personally or to report him to higher authorities. However, he feels that he must do something to improve the situation.
4. Dr. R, a general practitioner in a small rural town, is approached by a contract research organization (C.R.O.) to participate in a clinical trial of a new nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) for osteoarthritis. She is offered a sum of money for each patient that she enrols in the trial. The C.R.O. representative assures her that the trial has received all the necessary approvals, including one from an ethics review committee. Dr. R has never participated in a trial before and is pleased to have this opportunity, especially with the extra money. She accepts without inquiring further about the scientific or ethical aspects of the trial.
Each of these case studies invites ethical reflection. They raise questions about physician behaviour and decision-making not scientific or technical questions such as how to treat diabetes or how to perform a double bypass, but questions about values, rights and responsibilities. Physicians face these kinds of questions just as often as scientific and technical ones.
Approached to Bioethics:
Pendekatan dengan teori etika tradisional: 1. Deontologi. asal kata deon , tidak bersyarat (kategori ) dan tidak bergantung pada tujuan tertentu. Benar tidaknya tindakan bergantung pada perbuatan atau cara bertindak itu sendiri, bukan pada akibat tindakannya. Dasarnya kewajiban, mutlak.
Approached to bioethics:
Pendekatan metode etika klinis: 1. Casuistry. metode pengambilan keputusan etik dengan menganalogikan situasi dan kondisi suatu kasus terhadap kasus terdahulu yang sudah ada solusi nya secara konsensus. 2. Moral pluralism. Dikembangkan oleh Jonsen, Siegler dan Winslade.
Appoached to bioethics:
Pendekatan etika kedokteran terapan: 1.Principlism. Mementingkan prinsip etik dalam bertindak. *Four principles = kaidah dasar bioetika tokoh: Beauchamp and Childress. *Etika normatif 2.Alternatif Principlism. *Etika komunitarian *Feminist ethics (etika kasih sayang)
Konteks : tertuju pd pihak ke-2 (individu pasien) pada umumnya, yg stabil (tidak gawat darurat, tidak rentan)
manusia apa
saja yang ada, pantas (elok) kita bersikap baik terhadapnya (apalagi ada yang hidup)
tak
Hilangnya sesuatu yang penting Dokter sanggup mencegah bahaya atau kehilangan tersebut Manfaat bagi pasien > kerugian dokter (hanya mengalami resiko minimal) Tindakan kedokteran terbukti efektif
Prima facie
Adalah perubahan pemilihan penggunaan prinsip dasar bioetik yang paling tepat atau cocok dalam suatu konteks.
Medical Indication
Deductive logic
Non Maleficence
Autonomy Justice
Beneficence
EBM
ENRICHMENT OF JUSTIFICATION
Non Maleficence
Autonomy
Justice
CREATIVE THINKING
VALUE
CONFORM
Medical Indication
Beneficence
Justice
pihak II kesakitan/ menderita, gadar,pra-cacat Distress Rentan uzur, terjepit tanpa pilihan Miskin bodoh.
pihak III Non pasien wakil/wali kluster pop Komunitas Penyandang dana Berpotensi Dirugikan/ Paling krg diuntungkan
TERGANTUNG .
BERUBAH MENJADI
rights
justification conscien ce
Macro level Politics of Health Meso level Health services delivery Macho level Health care teams
Micro level Clinical medicine
Deduction = logic
Induction = casuistry
Goals of medicine
Promotion of health and prevention of disease Relief of symptoms pain, and suffering Cure of disease Prevention of untimely death
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b) Berbuat baik (beneficence). Selain menghormati martabat manusia, dokter juga harus mengusahakan agar pasien yang dirawatnya terjaga keadaan kesehatannya (patient welfare). Pengertian berbuat baik diartikan bersikap ramah atau menolong, lebih dari sekedar memenuhi kewajiban.
c) Tidak berbuat yang merugikan (nonmaleficence). Praktik Kedokteran haruslah memilih pengobatan yang paling kecil risikonya dan paling besar manfaatnya. Pernyataan kuno: first, do no harm, tetap berlaku dan harus diikuti.
d) Keadilan (justice). Perbedaan kedudukan sosial, tingkat ekonomi, pandangan politik, agama dan faham kepercayaan, kebangsaan dan kewarganegaraan, status perkawinan, serta perbedaan jender tidak boleh dan tidak dapat mengubah sikap dokter terhadap pasiennya. Tidak ada pertimbangan lain selain kesehatan pasien yang menjadi perhatian utama dokter. Prinsip dasar ini juga mengakui adanya kepentingan masyarakat sekitar pasien yang harus dipertimbangkan.