Transcript Slide 1

Residents:
Healers in
the making
Thalia Arawi, PhD
Clinical Bioethicist
Director, Salim El-Hoss Bioethics &
Professionalism Program
Vice-Chair, Medical Center Ethics Committee
Faculty of Medicine
[email protected]
Welcome!
Welcome to Residency!
Being part of this profession entails
ethical and professional obligations
(Dr. Zeineldine addressed you on
this)
In part, this requires learning to
“think ethically” through selfreflection, alone and with others
At AUBMC we are committed to
Patient Centered Care.
Any resident and attending who
fails to do that fails in
professionalism and betrays his/her
profession.
Plan
• Few words about what patients think
of physicians. Food for thought
• MCEC: Bioethics in direct relation to
Patient Care
• Final words
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A study assessing the public perception regarding
physicians in Lebanon revealed the following:
The physician traits most desired by
the public were found to be: moral
traits (41%), interpersonal traits (36%),
scientific traits (19%) and other (4%).
The most unwanted traits/behaviours
were a lack of interpersonal traits
(57%), a lack of moral traits (40%) and
a lack of scientific skills (3%).
Sample Traits
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Inhumane
Negligent
Does not admit mistakes
Dishonest
Hurried
Does not discuss with patients
Unfriendly
Treats patients as a number or case
Disrespectful
Arrogant:
Does not respect appointments
High-handed
Treat patients as inferior
Pretentious
Annoyed with questions
Does not listen to patients
Not Desired
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Humane
Honest
Ethical
Not materialistic
Compassionate
Humble
God fearing
Explains thoroughly
Good listener
Respects patients
Has good interpersonal skills
Gives time to patients
Caring
Patient
Smiles
Is not haughty
Desired
We all need to start thinking…
• How not to fall prey to the
dehumanization of medicine?
–
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–
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Invasion of Money into Medicine
Physicians became the service providers
Patients became “clients”
Doctors can now make a lot of money (regardless
of how)
– The profession began attracting the “wrong” kind
of person
Regression in moral development and
empathy in residents as they progress
through medical school is RAMPANT.
•You
Thecan
Hidden
Curriculum:
everything
matters
guard
against
it
by
emulating
(how you dress, talk, communicate, examine,
good
treat, role
etc.) models and self-reflection.
"As I look into the future, I think we will
undoubtedly be a much more divided
profession than we are now. We will not
have again an ethic which will bind all of
us," There will be "those who choose to
follow the moral imperative--the high
ground--and those who become purely
businessmen and entrepreneurs."
It is YOUR CALL!
E. D. Pellegrino, Previous Chairman of
the President's Council
on Bioethics
Being a “good physician”
• Is much more than following rules and
Healthcare
Practitioner (ST) or
principles
• It is about whatHealer?
kind of person you are and
want to become
YOUR CHOICE
• Rules and Principles
taught
• Becoming process (will, mind, heart)
Doing the right thing when NO ONE IS LOOKING!
SHBPP-AUBFM HUMANISM AND
PROFESIONALISM AWARD, 2012
Dr. Darwish
SHBPP-AUBFM HUMANISM AND
PROFESIONALISM AWARD, 2013
Dr. Costa
SHBPP-AUBFM HUMANISM AND
PROFESIONALISM AWARD, 2014
– Residents Graduation Ceremony
June 10, 2014
You have all taken Bioethics
• I will not repeat what you already know
MCEC
AUBMC-MCEC
http://www.aub.edu.lb/fm/shbpp/mcec/Pages/index.aspx
MCEC Handbook
MCEC Handbook
What is a Clinical Ethics Committee?
Group
of
professionals
who
meet
to
Final
treatment
decisions
are made
consider
and discuss
the ethical
between
attending
aspectsthe
of clinical
carephysician
within theand
hospital.
patient
or surrogate-decision maker.
It gives opinions or recommendations.
Functions of the MCEC
Education
provides consultative
services regarding ethical
issues pertaining to a
specific patient.
Case
Case
Consultation
Consultation
MCEC
facilitates educational
opportunities for health
care professionals, patients,
and their families.
discussions and evaluations
of policies and procedures
having ethical implications.
Policy
Members represent
• Diverse medical depts.
• Other departments (such as nursing,
social services)
• Religious views
• Hospital administration
• Lawyer
• Bioethicist
• Community
Members bring experience and expertise from
their areas.
Common Ethical Issues
 Withholding or withdrawing
treatment
 Do Not Attempt Resuscitation
orders (DNR/AND)
 Identification of patient’s
representative
 Medical futility
 Informed consent
 Aborting a fetus with
malformation
 Determining decision-making
capacity
 Palliative care issues
 Conflict resolution
 Perinatal & neonatal issues
 Other
5’
The “Ashley Treatment”..
Ethics Committee recommended the Ashely Treatment
http://ashleytreatment.spaces.live.com/
Born 1997 with static
encephalopathy (permanent brain
damage) of unknown etiology
Breathes on her own but unable to
raise head up, sit up, hold and
object, walk, talk, must be tube fed
•High doses of
2003 Signs of pubertyestrogen to
2004 received “Ashley
Treatment”
halt
growth
•Hysterectomy
Breast bud
removal
Was this right?
• Who should decide?
least
two points:
•At
Who
should
be involved when
• making
Ethics isthepart
and parcel of
decisions?
patient
• The
fact iscare
that(medicine)
the decision created
great deal ofand
controversy.
• aDiscussion
decisions
cannot
made
at a distance
• But
it wasbedone
in good
faith.
The average hospital ethics committee
receives 3 requests for case consultation per
year
AUBMC Medical Center Ethics Committee
(MCEC)
• From 2005 to March 2012, only
5 cases were referred to the
medical center Ethics
committee for
recommendation.
Av. 2-3 hrs.
http://www.aubmc.org.lb/Pages/AUBMCleading-in-Bedside-Ethics-Consultations.aspx
2013-2014
• TO DATE- 32 bedside ethics
consultations
• Called for by:
– Attending physicians
– Residents
– Nurses
– Patients
Satisfied Pts and Phys.
Patch Adams Last Speech
29
Our Lives are Dedicated to Yours!
Loaded term… we are
responsible/accountable for it
A note.. The elderly
• Often older people are treated with
less enthusiasm, care and dedication
• “They are old”
• What you owe to the child, the adult,
you owe to them, even more.
Good Luck in entering yet another learning
phase.. As physicians
• Remember:
– Do not judge others from your own perspective.
Keep an open mind, develop a bird’s eye view of
things. You will be surprised what you will discover.
– You are now residents. Med students are not your
subordinates. They are what you have been just a
few days ago and they are the future you. Be kind to
them and help them learn as you learn. Be a role
model.
– Medicine is about team work. Nurses,
Physiotherapists, etc. are educated healthcare
professionals and members of the healthcare team.
Without them, there is no patient centered care.
– The patient is your “partner”, your “teacher”, not
your “tool”.
• The patient “has” a disease, he/she “is” not a
disease.
• The patient has a name like yours, which is
not a room number nor ends with something
like “-itis”.
• Residents and physicians often suffer from a
chronic iatrogenic disease called Egotitis. The
only proven remedy to this illness is humility
and remembering your own finitude and
mortality.
• The reputation of a lifetime may be
determined by the conduct of a single
moment.
• RESPICE FINEM, for you too are mortal.
Questions?