Medical Ethics and the NHS Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 main principles of medical ehthics?

A

Beneficience, justice, non melificience, respect for autonomy

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2
Q

Define Autonomy.

A

People have the right to control what happens to their bodies (right to refuse treatments)

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3
Q

Define beneficience (3 things)

A

Doing good for the patient,
In every situatiuon
the pt should be considered individually.

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4
Q

What is non maleficence?

A

Do no harm, consider doctrine of double effect (where treatments are meant to do good but may unintentiuonally cause harm e.g cannulation).

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5
Q

What does justice mean?

A

What is right and fair in any situation

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6
Q

What is doctine of double effect?

A

Doing something morally good, but may have a morally bad side effect

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7
Q

CONFIDENTIALIITY

What are the 7 caldicott principles?

A
  1. Justify the purpose of using the info
  2. Don’t use unless absolutely necessary
  3. use minimum neccessary data
  4. access is on a need to know basis
  5. be aware of repsonsibilities
  6. understand and comply with the law
  7. duty to share and duty to protect information
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8
Q

What is the relevant legislation in regards to confidentiality?

A

NHS Act 2006
Health and social care act 2012
Data protection act 1998
Human rights act 1998

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9
Q

When was the NHS formed?

A

1948 - had an idea that good healthcare should be free regardless of wealth.

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10
Q

Who is in charge of health care and the NHS

A

The secretary of state for health - oversees the department of health

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11
Q

What are CCGS?

A

Clinical comissioning groups
Created following the health and social care act 2012.
They are NHS bodies responsible for planning and commissioning of health care services in their local area.

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12
Q

What is the CQC

A

Care quality comission.
independant regualtor
makes sure services are safe and effective and providing high quality care

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13
Q

What is duty of confidence?

A

When a person discloses information to another, where it is expected that info will be held in confidence

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14
Q

Name a communication model

A

SMCR -
Sender
Message
Channel
Reciever
also can include:
understand
feedback

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15
Q

List 3 elements of communication

A

Body language - 55%
Tone of voice - 38%
words - 7%

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16
Q

What is the NHS constitution?

A

Explains the principles, values rights and responsibilties that underpin the NHS. Designed to make sure that the NHS continues to meet the needs of the patients, the public and the staff.
Edited every 10 years
New handbook every 3

17
Q

Key legislation relating to patient records

A

Access to health records act
Data protection act - GDPR
Health and social act 2012
NHS constitution
Record management - nhs code of practice
Caldecott principles