Ethics Flashcards
Why is ethics relevant to professional practice?
- As vets we are professionals:. SELF REGULATE: adherer to the RCVS code of professional conduct
- Ethical dilemma- multiple competing responsibilities where it is difficult to prioritise one over another
- Poor decision-making can have a negative impact on animal welfare, vet-client relationships and wellbeing and we should therefore strive to achieve rational balanced decisions regarding our patients.
What are ethics?
Moral principles that govern a person’s behaviour or how they conduct and activity
How does consideration given to animals vary?
According to if we believe the animal has:
a) intrinsic value - worthy of ethical consideration in their own right
b) Instrumental value - worthy of consideration due to their use to US (not as an individual)
What is sentience and how is it measured?
- Measured by comparing the neurophysiology and behaviour to that of humans (CNS)
- Sentience - the capacity of an organism to have feelings including the ability to think, suffer and experience emotions
What are the 6 main ethical theories?
victor uses condoms dogging niki R
- Virtue
- Utilitarianism
- Contractarianism
- Deontology
- Naturalism
- Relational
What is contractarianism?
- views of ethics and morality based on a contract agreement between 2 parties
What is Utilitarianism?
- OUTCOME based - balances cost and benefit of an action and outcome it causes
What is Deontology?
- Rules and Duties
What is closely associated with deontology and what is its 4 guiding principles?
PRINCIPALISM
- Autonomy - whose free will? the client or animal
- Beneficence - to improve animal welfare: do good
- Non-maleficence - doing no harm: we use euthanasia? injections hurt?
- Justice - treat all animals and owners in a fair and equal way- depends on moral status of animals
What is Relational?
- The relationship we have with an animal and therefore if it is worthy of consideration?
What is a virtue?
- All about characteristics and being a nice person
What is naturalism?
- Respect for nature or conservationist
What is the ethical decision making process?
ICA(SEWC) RDAR I Call Ainsley (SEWC) Rah DAR 1. Prepare/ identify issue 2. Consider options available if undertake this decision 3. Analyse Issue involved a) Stakeholders and their interests b) Ethical principles involved c) Whose interests rank highest: conflicting interests of stakeholders d)consequences 4. Consider rules (legislation, professional codes) 5. Discuss with others 6. Act 7. Reflect
what are the issues surrounding Virtue?
ISSUES:
a) Focus on person and character
b) Includes actions, attitudes, views
c) avoids extremes
d) uses role models - reflection and development
e) no guidance
f) might misuse e.g. if use a bad role model
g) allows for actions that are well meaning but have a bad outcome as you were trying to be a nice person so it is fine?
h) motives - not steal because virtue or just scared of being caught?
what are the issues surrounding Utilitarianism?
ISSUES:
a) Aim: to maximise human and animals wellbeing
b) Animals are a stakeholder as sentient and capacity to suffer
c) No actions are inherently wrong as all about outcome
d) Intentions are irrelevant (meant to do something for a good reason but neg outcome = wrong decision)
e. ) Cost benefit, weigh up and achieve greatest good for the greatest number
f. ) can be challenging to predict outcomes correctly
g) immoral acts- acceptable to murder one person to use organs to save another? Legal constraints in place to prevent some actions
h) How do we measure greatest good? – animals vs humans?
i) Only net outcomes count, the individual doesn’t count (51% happy 49% suffering, that’s fine as more are happy than not so suffering don’t count)
j) No considerations to intensions- try to do something good but it went wrong = wrong choice