Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part 1 Perioperative Care of the Surgical Patient
- Section 1 General
- Chapter 1 Anesthesia management of the surgical patient
- Chapter 2 Specialized nutrition support in the surgical patient
- Chapter 3 Preoperative testing
- Chapter 4 Medication safety for surgical patients
- Chapter 5 Informed consent and decision-making capacity
- Chapter 6 Ethical considerations in the surgical patient
- Chapter 7 Perioperative pain management
- Chapter 8 The medical consult
- Section 2 Cardiology
- Section 3 Hypertension
- Section 4 Pulmonary
- Section 5 Gastroenterology
- Section 6 Hematology
- Section 7 Infectious disease
- Section 8 Renal disease
- Section 9 Endocrinology
- Section 10 Rheumatology
- Section 11 Neurology
- Section 12 Surgery in the Elderly
- Section 13 Obesity
- Section 14 Transplantation
- Section 15 Psychiatric Disorders
- Section 16 Peripartum Patients
- Part 2 Surgical Procedures and their Complications
- Index
- References
Chapter 6 - Ethical considerations in the surgical patient
from Section 1 - General
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2013
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Preface
- Introduction
- Part 1 Perioperative Care of the Surgical Patient
- Section 1 General
- Chapter 1 Anesthesia management of the surgical patient
- Chapter 2 Specialized nutrition support in the surgical patient
- Chapter 3 Preoperative testing
- Chapter 4 Medication safety for surgical patients
- Chapter 5 Informed consent and decision-making capacity
- Chapter 6 Ethical considerations in the surgical patient
- Chapter 7 Perioperative pain management
- Chapter 8 The medical consult
- Section 2 Cardiology
- Section 3 Hypertension
- Section 4 Pulmonary
- Section 5 Gastroenterology
- Section 6 Hematology
- Section 7 Infectious disease
- Section 8 Renal disease
- Section 9 Endocrinology
- Section 10 Rheumatology
- Section 11 Neurology
- Section 12 Surgery in the Elderly
- Section 13 Obesity
- Section 14 Transplantation
- Section 15 Psychiatric Disorders
- Section 16 Peripartum Patients
- Part 2 Surgical Procedures and their Complications
- Index
- References
Summary
In the long tradition of medical ethics, many theories and frameworks for ethical analysis of issues and situations have been developed. The use of primary principles [1] is one such framework that has been identified as relevant for making clinical decisions:
Beneficence - promoting good; acting in the best interests of the patient.
Non-maleficence - avoiding or minimizing harm by action or omission.
Autonomy - respecting patients’ rights to make decisions about their healthcare.
- serves as the foundation for informed consent and informed refusal of diagnostic and therapeutic interventions.
Justice - fair and equitable treatment that reflects what the patient is due.
These principles can be instrumental in the ethical analysis of clinical situations in which the best option for patient care is not clear. Each is considered “prima facie,” a principle that is to be honored unless it is in conflict with an equal or greater principle, in which case, the relative weight of each principle will have to be decided. For example, determining whether aggressive interventions and continuing life-supporting measures are in the best interest of the patient will have to be weighed against the suffering that it engenders and the patient's autonomous expression of their wishes to avoid certain procedures and outcomes. In the USA, high priority has traditionally been placed on patient autonomy in healthcare decisions. Many of the ethical issues covered in this chapter will explore the emphasis on patient autonomy.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Medical Management of the Surgical PatientA Textbook of Perioperative Medicine, pp. 46 - 60Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013