In a special issue of this journal, a range of
authors addressed the critical problem of difference in
bioethics. To what extent do class, culture, ethnicity,
and race affect the ethical decisions that patients and
professionals must make in a medical context? Those arguing
for an understanding of cultural influences in bioethical
decisionmaking—for example, Hern, Koenig, Moore,
and Marshall—typically argue from the perspective
of individual case studies to demonstrate the importance
of these social constructs. Others, like Erika Blacksher,
however, worry that this approach will obscure the
uniqueness of individual decisionmakng patterns, allowing
all persons of a single group to be aggregated as if their
class, cultural construct, or religious affiliation were
the single motive element in their medicolegal decisionmaking.
There is, she cautions, a risk of misuse if a professional
care provider reflexively assumes individual patient or
surrogate reactions on the basis of ethnicity or culture.