Transcript Bioethics
What is Bioethics?
Ethics- examining and understanding choices.
The discipline dealing with what is good and bad,
and with moral duty and obligation.
The principles of conduct governing an individual or
group.
Ethic – A set of moral principles and values.
“Individual Ethic” – Your personal view of what
is right and wrong regarding a specific issue.
Ethics deals with what “ought to be” not with
“what is”!
What is Bioethics?
Bioethics- studies right and wrong
in the life sciences.
Medical: Dealing with doctors’ role,
medical research, human life.
Environmental: Dealing with nature,
habitats, and population.
Social Sciences: Dealing with human
nature and behavior.
History of Bioethics
Medical Ethics
Centuries old discipline.
Numerous codes of conduct, including the
Hippocratic Oath (“first, do no harm…”)
Bioethics emerges in the 1960’s.
Medical technology advances:
Rise of Environmentalism:
Kidney dialysis, Organ transplantation, Abortion, The Pill,
shift toward death in hospitals.
Silent Spring (Rachel Carson)
Cultural Changes:
Civil Rights, Feminism
Bioethics is Multidisciplinary
Philosophy & Religion:
Medicine:
Traditional roots.
Personal and Social concerns.
Social & Policy Sciences:
Rooted in Tradition.
Legal, social, political, & policy concerns.
Biology/Ecology:
Environmental sciences.
Scientific understanding of life.
What does a bioethical issue
look like?
It is a controversial issue.
It relates to life sciences.
The question could be asked;
“Should”……… or “Is…… ethical”
Example:
“Is abortion in the 2nd trimester ethical?
“Should women in their 2nd trimester of pregnancy
be allowed to have abortions?
Bioethical Questions
Moral Questions:
Private choice vs. Public standards.
Personal Questions:
What kind of person should I be…
What are my duties and obligations to
others…
What do I owe to the common good…
Bioethical Questions
Bioethical questions involve moral
conflict:
Moral conflict is a problem that requires
a choice.
The consequences of the choice are
painful no matter what action you
take.
Moral Behavior
Moral Behavior- an individual or group’s
interpretation of what is an acceptable
action or choice.
Example: A young women suffers a massive
stroke and is kept breathing only with a
ventilator.
Issue: “Should the ventilator be shut off?”
Moral Conflict and Behavior
Perspectives: ways of viewing the world
from a different lens “putting yourself in
someone else's shoes”.
Family
Doctor
Insurance company
Values influence
choices. When values
are on opposite ends
decisions become
sources of conflict.
Key Bioethical Considerations
How do you define “Good”?
Good-
varies across groups and
societies.
Culture, religion, gender, and generation
gaps influence what one considers good.
Different perspectives
Key Bioethical Considerations
Utility
Assess costs or risks vs. benefits.
Financial costs & benefits.
Social or moral costs & benefits.
Measure “good” to promote the greatest
happiness for the most people.
Key Bioethical Considerations
Beneficence: The practice of good
deeds.
Refraining from harm.
Actively doing good.
Limits to beneficence:
Duty to self.
Feasibility (limited human capacity).
Key Bioethical Considerations
Autonomy (Self-Determination)
Freedom to follow one’s own will.
“Good” defined by the recipient of an action,
rather than by the actor.
Individuals think and choose for themselves.
Our autonomy is limited by many factors.
Legal, cultural, religious, traditional, financial.
Key Bioethical Considerations
Autonomy thought exercise.
Imagine
a wealthy woman with a
painful, terminal illness, considering
assisted suicide.
How
might her choice be affected by:
Her culture & religion.
Her family
Key Bioethical Considerations
Autonomy thought exercise.
Imagine
yourself alone on an island.
How would your behavior be different
with no other people around?
Key Bioethical Considerations
Values: Ideas or images that
explain why something matters to us.
Positive
vs. negative values.
Organic values: Life, health, vigor…
Moral values: Rights & duties.
Values & Action: We act to promote our
values.
Shared values are required for a society
to exist.