What 3 areas of professionalism should be the responsibility of medical students when engaging in patient contact?
1/3

What 3 areas of professionalism should be the responsibility of medical students when engaging in patient contact?
2/3

What 3 areas of professionalism should be the responsibility of medical students when engaging in patient contact?
3/3

Give 5 examples of the duties of a doctor.
1/5

Give 5 examples of the duties of a doctor.
2/5

Give 5 examples of the duties of a doctor.
3/5
(Ideas, Concerns, Expectations)

Give 5 examples of the duties of a doctor.
4/5
(to best serves patients interests.)

Give 5 examples of the duties of a doctor.
5/5
(against patients or colleagues.)

What are Ethics?
Ethics is the study of what makes an action right or wrong.
Name the 3 types of Ethics
What is Meta-Ethics?
The study of the meaning of moral concepts (i.e. what does right mean)

What is Normative Ethics?
The study of the means of deciding what is right or wrong.

What is Applied Ethics?
The application of moral theory to real world cases.

What is ‘medical ethics’?
Medical ethics is concerned with the application of moral theory to medical cases.

Which types of ethics is most relevant to ‘medical ethics’?

In ‘Moral Theory’, what is: Consequentialism?
Consequentialism is which the rightness is judged by the desirability of the consequences of that action.
In ‘Moral Theory’ what is: Duty-based (deontology)
Actions are right if they conform to a system of rules or regulations - not necessarily if they result in the most desirable consequence.

In ‘Moral Theory’ what is: Virtue Ethics.
Virtue Ethics states that the right act is the one which a virtuous person would perform in the circumstances. The virtues are those character traits and dispositions needed for ‘human flourishing’.
Provide an overview of the four principle approach to medical ethics.
Beneficence - A practitioner should act in the best interests of the patient. Non-maleficience: ‘Primum non nocere’, a practitioner should ensure that no further harm comes to the patient as a result of his/her actions. Autonomy - the competent patient has a right to make his/her own decisions regarding their own healthcare, and should be guided by the practitioner into making a well informed choice. Justice - concerns resource management and ‘who gets what treatment’.
What do proponents of the four principles approach state?
That the four principles pose prima facie, not absolute, obligations: This means that each one of the four principles should be followed unless it conflicts with an equal or stronger moral obligation.
Define patient-centred care.
Patient-centred care is health care that is closely congruent with and responsive to patients’ wants, needs and preferences. This enhances prevention and health promotion and enhances the continuing relationship between the patient and the doctor. It leads to more accurate diagnoses, increased adherence with treatment regimes, more effective patient-doctor relationship and increased patient (and doctor) satisfaction. Recognising the patient’s anxieties can help to reduce them, leading to a better mental and physical health (the immune system is dampened when stressed as cortisol is released).
What are the main criteria, or objectives, in patient centred care?
The Sick Role. The Patient’s obligations should be to:
The Sick role - the doctor’s obligations are: