FROM OTHER JOURNALS
We scan the Annals of Internal Medicine
(www.annals.org), New
England Journal of Medicine (www.nejm.org), Journal of the
American Medical Association (www.jama.ama-assn.org),
Lancet (www.thelancet.com), British
Medical Journal (www.bmj.com), Canadian Medical
Association Journal (www.cma.ca/cmaj.com), Journal
of Medical Ethics (www.jmedethics.com) and Eubios
Journal of Asian and International Bioethics (www.biol/tsukuba.ac) for
articles of interest to the medical ethics community. For this issue of the IJME
we reviewed the February-April 2004 issues of these journals. Articles of
interest from the National Medical Journal of India, Monash Bioethics Review and
Developing World Bioethics are abstracted as and when they become
available.
Apologies
Learning to say
sorry is hard for physicians anywhere, perhaps more so in the Indian culture
where a physician has a God-like status. However, as the following articles
point out, it is the right thing to do for several reasons.
Apologies have a potential for healing that is
matched only by the difficulty most people have in offering them. Physicians
face special challenges in this realm. They may feel shame, guilt and grief when
their actions harm others, even if the fault is unclear. Ineffective
communi-cation is the single largest factor resulting in patient litigation.
Good communication can avert or help end conflict, especially
litigation.
Frenkel DN et al. Words that heal. Ann Intern Med
2004;140:482-483.
Mazor KM et al. Health plan members' views about disclosure
of medical errors. Ann Intern Med 2004;140:409-18
How to get your message
straight
The Indian media has been as guilty as others of
writing stories that are incomplete and sensational, and rarely is there any
follow up. Yet the popular media is the best way to disseminate medical
information. Both media and medical staff can learn a lot from the article that
follows.
Press coverage of health care is often sloppy and
sensationalised. Doctors and researchers have good reasons to help journalists
do their job well because the press could be a positive influence on the
nation's thinking about health. Medical journalists translate complex messages,
under deadline, into news that people can understand. Not surprisingly, the
quality of media reports varies greatly. Doctors too bear responsibility for
trying to get attention for their message rather than on getting their message
right. The authors suggest improved ways for both reporters and medical staff to
communicate.
Schwartz LM et al. The media matter: a call for
straightforward medical reporting. Ann Intern Med 2004;140:
226-228.
Media hype?
Do
journalisrs' report distort research findings? These two papers examine this
question.
Even though a reporter's words reach the public rather than
scientists or clinicians, Bubela's study found that media reports are reasonably
accurate in most instances. Cases of inaccuracy may be as much a product of the
researcher's overenthusiasm as of error by the reporter. Press coverage may not
exaggerate wildly or contain blatantly inaccurate statements, but may be in
favour or against a subject. Scientists and journalists have conflicting
responsibilities because while reporters need to gain newspaper space by
dramatic statements, scientists prefer cautious, detailed, and balanced
reporting. Condit suggests ways for medical staff to avoid errors.
Bubela
TM et al. Do the print media 'hype' genetic research? A comparison of newspaper
stories and peer-reviewed research papers. CMAJ 2004;170:399-407.
Condit C.
Science reporting to the public: Does the message get twisted? CMAJ
2004;170:1415.
Doctors and research participants
The attitudes of physicians in India are probably similar to that found
in the following study done in Taiwan.
This survey of physicians from academic and
community medical centres studied their attitudes and awareness of human
research participant protection (HRPP). Ninety per cent of the respondents had
never heard of Institutional Review Boards, the Nuremberg Code, the Declaration
of Helsinki, etc. Despite this, more than 78% of the respondents felt HRPP was
important and over 59% wanted research participants to be well informed and give
informed consent. Physicians reported that careful selection of patients was
more important than fully informing research participants, obtaining informed
consent or submitting a proposal for IRB review. This study suggests that the
current system for HRPP in Taiwan may not adequately protect the safety and
rights of human research subjects.
Shih T. Are you suprised? A national
survey of physicians' attitudes toward protecting human research participants in
Taiwan. Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics
2004;14:42-8.
Research on domestic
violence
Domestic violence affects all strata of Indian society.
Research on this subject is to be encouraged so that we may understand the roots
and eradicate it. This article reminds us of researchers' special obligations to
the survivors.
No matter what the form of research is, whether
retrospective or involving face-to-face interviews with actual victims, there
are certain basic ethical principles that investigators should follow. Safety,
confidentiality and interviewer skills and training of research staff-in medical
as well as social and legal assistance-are more important than in many other
forms of research. The main ethical concerns related to researching violence
against women are the potential to inadvertently cause distress, possibility of
risk to respondents and preventing respondents from feeling that she is just a
'means' to an end, which is the study itself.
Elcioglu O. Ethics in
domestic violence research. Eubios Journal of Asian and International Bioethics
2004;14:50-52.
Screening for communicable
disease
The author says that the media and other groups are
erroneously linking communicable disease control to immigration control and
advocating stringent health measures that are unlikely to reduce tuberculosis or
HIV infection in the UK and are also unethical.
Coker R. Compulsory
screening of immigrants for tuberculosis and HIV is not based on adequate
evidence, and has practical and ethical problems. BMJ 2004;328:298-300.
Regulating private health
care
The ills plaguing the Indian medical scene are also seen in
countries such as Canada and the USA. The difference is that in the West
stringent laws are enforced with stiff penalties for those that break
them.
Independent health facilities (IHFs) are privately
owned, for-profit entities that provide therapeutic and diagnostic services such
as physiotherapy and laboratory testing. These operate both within and outside
the public system. These facilities depend on physician referrals for patients
and offer compensation (a kickback) consisting of cash payments for each
referral, discounted office space or leases for medical equipment, or business
loans at below-market rates. Kickbacks and self-referrals to IHFs owned by
physicians can potentially distort clinical judgement. Professional regulatory
bodies such as the provincial colleges of physicians and surgeons may have the
greatest expertise in governing such conflicts of interest. Authors review
existing laws in the various Canadian states and suggest ways to tighten
them.
Choudhry S et al.Unregulated private markets for health care in
Canada? Rules of professional misconduct, physician kickbacks and physician
self-referral. CMAJ 2004;170:1115.
Publicising study results
The
disclosure of study findings to participants in research reflects the moral
obligation of researchers. This is founded in the ethical principle of respect
for human dignity, i.e. to avoid treating human participants as a means to an
end. It has many potential benefits for participants and may have a direct
impact on their quality of life. Disclosure of results may also benefit research
as a whole by demonstrating its tangible benefits to the public and by engaging
public enthusiasm and support for the principle of research. The authors examine
ways in which disclosure of results can benefit or harm the recipient and
propose ways in which researchers can accomplish this difficult task.
Fernandez CV et al. Considerations and costs of disclosing study
findings to research participants. CMAJ 2004;170 :1417
Evidence, not
intuition
Evidence- based medicine has aroused a lot of
controversy in the medical field. This issue of the Journal of Medical Ethics
has several articles that discuss the pros and cons of this approach in the
various branches of medicine.
Evidence-based medicine (EBM), a term introduced in
1992, says that all medical action should rely on solid quantitative evidence
based on the best of clinical epidemiological research and one should be
cautious about actions that are only based on experience or extrapolation from
basic science. The idea was proposed in 1830 by physicians belonging to
'Médecine d'Observation' in France who were reacting against a kind of medicine
that would be considered 'nonsense' by today's scientific standards. It is not
that EBM is the only scientific medicine and that all medicine practised before
it was unscientific. EBM states that intuition and unsystematic clinical
experience as well as a pathophysiological rationale are insufficient grounds
for clinical decision-making. EBM challenges the paternalistic and authoritarian
nature of much medical practice and helps increase awareness that, even when
based on scientific methods, there is a selective and structural imbalance in
the nature of the evidence that is available, because that evidence is skewed
and biased toward therapeutic versus preventive interventions and toward simple
pharmacological versus complex behavioural/social care.
Liberati A et
al. Symposium on evidence based medicine. Introduction to the symposium: what
evidence based medicine is and what it is not. J Med Ethics
2004;30:120-121.
Clinicians and religion
The
following article addresses a topic that is rarely dealt with in health care.
How does one deal with religion in the care of patients?
Giving touching examples of patients with incurable
illnesses in his oncological practice, the author asks, 'How should doctors
examine and engage religion in the lives of their patients and in their own
lives as clinicians? Is there any place for God at the bedside during rounds?'
Religious beliefs are not always positive or beneficial. In the modern era,
religion and science are understood to be sharply divided, the two occupy
different domains. Religion explores the nature of God and offers rituals for
implementing God's will, whereas science eschews any such metaphysics and
through experimentation unveils the workings of the material world. The author
suggests that irrespective of one's religious beliefs, a physician should be
aware of the spiritual beliefs of the patient so that these are taken into
account when planning health care of the patient.
Groopman J. God at the
bedside. New Engl J Medicine 2004; 350:1176-8.
Affordability of medicines
In
October 2002, the Thai Central Intellectual Property and International Trade
Court ruled that because pharmaceutical patents can lead to high prices and
limit access to medicines, patients are injured by them and can challenge their
legality. Bristol-Meyers Squibb appealed this ruling but withdrew it in January
2004. This ruling has great international implications for health and human
rights confirming that patients-whose health and lives can depend on being able
to afford a medicine-can be considered as damaged parties and therefore have
legal standing to sue. The Thai court case was the outcome of a learning process
and years of networking between different civil society actors who joined forces
to protect and promote the right of access to treatment. This ruling has set an
important precedent that essential drugs are not just another consumer product
but a human right and that patients are injured by patents
Ford N et al.
The role of civil society in protecting public health over commercial interests:
lessons from Thailand. Lancet 2004; 363: 560-3.
Doctors and the drug
industry
This collection of articles discusses the industry's
influence on health professionals. The first author argues that despite evidence
to the contrary, doctors do not believe that they are influenced by the
pharmaceutical industry. He suggests steps that doctors can take to minimise
this influence. The second author discusses the responsibility of educators to
protect students from the influence of drug companies. Finally, a medical
student reports on the debate and activities within the National Council of the
Australian Medical Students' Associatioin.
Breen KJ. The medical
profession and the pharmaceutical industry: when will we open our eyes? Med J
Aust 2004;180:409-410.
Rogers WA et al. The ethics of pharmaceutical
industry relationships with medical students. Med J Aust 2004;180:411-414.
Hutchinson MS. Pharmaceutical companies and medical students: a student's
view. Med J Aust 2004;180:414.
Voices of developing
countries
For many health professionals in this part of the
world, medical ethics is mostly about problems related to poverty and inequity.
This special issue of the journal Developing World Bioethics carries a
collection of papers on the subject.
The papers cover a range of
subjects: infectious diseases which mostly affect the poor and raise special
ethical issues; the need to include 'power relations' in bioethics and
make it more relevant to 'real people's concerns'; distribution of research
resources; patents and access to drugs, and policy options to reduce
inequalities in health. The book review examines' ethics, economics, and
AIDS in Africa.'
Developing World Bioethics (Special issue): distribution
of resources. 2004;4:1-105.
Whistle blowing
When should
a health professional speak to the public about perceived shortfalls in
services?
This editorial discusses the case of a New Zealand
orthopaedic surgeon who told the press of a fall in hospital beds for acute
care. He was censured for failing to go through the correct channels. A
further question raised here is the doctor's right and duty-beyond caring for
patients, to speaking out on their behalf. The medical profession's voice
can 'represent an important check in the system where management is making
decisions which may affect people's fundamental well-being and
lives'.
From the editor's desk. New Zealand Bioethics Journal.
4:2-3.
Ethics in emergency
medicine
Indian doctors hesitate to provide emergency care
fearing that they will later be burdened with medicolegal red tape.
This article summarises some legal decisions related to emergency medical
care. For example, doctors must provide immediate life-saving treatment to
injured victims brought to them. The state is bound to provide adequate medical
facilities. In an emergency, doctors may provide appropriate treatment-with
discretion on choice of treatment-even without the patient's consent. In an
emergency, doctors have the right to treat some patients on priority as they see
fit. In an emergency, the doctor's priority is to save life rather than meet
legal obligations.
Mathiharan K. Emergency medicare: its ethical and
legal aspects. Natl Med J India 2004;17:31-5.