The document defines several key terms in ethics and bioethics:
1. Ethics is defined as standards of conduct that distinguish between right and wrong, as well as the systematic study of how humans treat each other. Applied ethics is the study of ethics in specific situations.
2. Bioethics is the study of ethical issues arising in biomedicine, while health ethics deals with issues in healthcare, medicine, and science.
3. Some prevalent bioethical issues discussed are abortion, euthanasia, suicide, and clinical death.
The document defines several key terms in ethics and bioethics:
1. Ethics is defined as standards of conduct that distinguish between right and wrong, as well as the systematic study of how humans treat each other. Applied ethics is the study of ethics in specific situations.
2. Bioethics is the study of ethical issues arising in biomedicine, while health ethics deals with issues in healthcare, medicine, and science.
3. Some prevalent bioethical issues discussed are abortion, euthanasia, suicide, and clinical death.
The document defines several key terms in ethics and bioethics:
1. Ethics is defined as standards of conduct that distinguish between right and wrong, as well as the systematic study of how humans treat each other. Applied ethics is the study of ethics in specific situations.
2. Bioethics is the study of ethical issues arising in biomedicine, while health ethics deals with issues in healthcare, medicine, and science.
3. Some prevalent bioethical issues discussed are abortion, euthanasia, suicide, and clinical death.
The document defines several key terms in ethics and bioethics:
1. Ethics is defined as standards of conduct that distinguish between right and wrong, as well as the systematic study of how humans treat each other. Applied ethics is the study of ethics in specific situations.
2. Bioethics is the study of ethical issues arising in biomedicine, while health ethics deals with issues in healthcare, medicine, and science.
3. Some prevalent bioethical issues discussed are abortion, euthanasia, suicide, and clinical death.
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Definition of Terms
Ethics (or morals): 1. standards of conduct (or behavior)
that distinguish between right/wrong, good/bad, etc. 2. the study of standards of conduct. the study of how human beings treat each other and the natural environment; it is the systematic examination of the attitudes and behaviours of people. ethics is about carefully studying the values that actually do guide our attitudes and behaviours in given contexts, and it is about exploring what values ought to guide our attitudes and behaviours. E t h i c s , a p p l i e d : t h e s t u d y o f e t h i c s i n s p e c i f i c s i t u a t i o n s , professions, or institutions, e.g. medical ethics, research ethics, etc. Ethics, meta-: the study of the meaning, truth, and justification of ethical statements. Bioethics: the study of ethical, social, or legal issues arising in biomedicine and biomedical research. Health ethics is the branch of ethics that deals with ethical issues in health, health care, medicine and science. It involves discussions about treatment choices and care options that individuals, families, and health care providers must face. It requires a critical reflection upon the relationships between health care professionals and those they serve, as well as the programmes, systems, and structures developed to improve the health of a population. Ethical dilemma: A situation in which two or more potential actions appear to be equally justifiable from an ethical point of view, i.e. one must choose between the lesser of two evils or the greater of two goods. Autonomy: 1. the capacity for self-governance, i.e. the ability to make reasonable decisions. 2. A moral principle barring interference with autonomous decision-making. Examples of health ethics issues include:
Making decisions about end-of-life care
Determining whether to allocate funds to the treatment of disease or the promotion of health Critically examining the discrepancies in health status between populations and our ethical obligations to ensure equitable access to health services Ensuring ethical conduct in health research Deliberating upon the ethical implications of genetic cloning technology Professional ethics are principles that govern the behaviour of a person or group in a business environment. Like values, professional ethics provide rules on how a person should act towards other people and institutions in such an environment. Professional ethics are often codified as a set of rules, which a particular group of people use. This means that all those in a particular group will use the same professional ethics, even though their values may be unique to each person. Advance Directive: A written statement that provides direction about a person’s health care choices and/or appoints a Health Care Agent is an advance directive. The most common forms are the Health Care Proxy (sometimes called a Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care) and the Living Will. Autonomy: The principle of ethics that states that one’s actions are independent from the will of others. Adult competent patients have the right to make informed choices, free from coercion, about the medical treatment they wish to receive/refuse. This right extends to those who have lost capacity and those who have never had capacity through surrogate decision-making. Also referred to as self-determination. Beneficence: To do good. To act in the person’s best interest. Under this principle, failure to increase the good of others when one is knowingly in a position to do so is morally wrong. Nonetheless, the principle is usually understood restrictively: in most theories, one is obligated to act to benefit others when one can do so with minimal risk, inconvenience or expense. Confidentiality – The principle that one should keep one's promises about information (re)disclosure. In science, confidential information typically includes: private data pertaining to human subjects, papers or research proposals submitted for peer review, personnel records, proceedings from misconduct inquiries or investigations, and proprietary data. A subset of duties of fidelity. Censorship: taking steps to prevent or deter the public communication of information or ideas. In science, censorship may involve prohibiting the publication of research or allowing publication only in redacted form (with some information removed). Clinical trial: an experiment designed to test the safety or efficacy of a type of therapy (such as a drug). Competence: the legal right to make decisions for one’s self. Adults are considered to be legally competent until they are adjudicated incompetent by a court. Fidelity – The principle that one should keep one's promises Falsification: changing, omitting, or manipulating data or results deceptively; or deceptive manipulation of research materials or experiments. Fraud: knowingly misrepresenting the truth or concealing a material (or relevant) fact to induce someone to make a decision to his or her detriment. Some forms of research misconduct may also qualify as fraud. A person who commits fraud may face civil or criminal legal liability. Informed consent: the process of making a free and informed decision (such as to participate in research). Individuals who provide informed consent must be legally competent and have enough decision-making capacity to consent to research. Research regulations specify the types of information that must be disclosed to the subject. See also Assent. Assent: a subject’s affirmative agreement to participate in research. Assent may take place when the subject does not have the capacity to provide informed consent (e.g. the subject is a child or mentally disabled) but has the capacity to meaningfully assent. Justice: 1. treating people fairly. 2. An ethical principle that obligates one to treat people fairly. Distributive justice refers to allocating benefits and harms fairly; procedural justice refers to using fair processes to make decisions that affect people; formal justice refers to treating similar cases in the same way. Living Will: A written statement in which a person gives specific instructions regarding the medical care or treatments that he/she would or would not want. This can assist clinicians and the health care agent or family in making a “substituted judgment” for the patient. Plagiarism: misrepresenting someone else’s creative work (e.g. words, methods, pictures, ideas, or data) as one’s own. Placebo: a biologically or chemically inactive substance or intervention given to a research subject which is used to control for the Placebo effect. Placebo effect: a person’s psychosomatic response to the belief that they are receiving an effective treatment. Researchers may also be susceptible to the placebo effect if they treat subjects differently who they believe are receiving effective treatment. Prima Facie: Literally “At face value”. In ethics refers to the primary duty or overriding principle ethically when evaluating a given situation or patient case. Based on the first impression; accepted as correct until proved otherwise. Paternalism: Telling people what is best: a style of management, or an approach to personal relationships, in which the desire to help, advise, and protect may neglect individual choice and personal responsibility. In medicine refers to the stance that “the doctor knows best.” Veracity – The principle that one should tell the truth ("honesty is the best policy"). The principle of ethics that a competent patient must be provided with the complete truth about his or her medical condition and choices. Nonmaleficence – Moral principle that one should refrain from harming others ("first, do no harm") Proxy Consent: Voluntary consent given on behalf of another who is unable to give it himself/herself. Codes of conduct -Professional codes of conduct draw on these professional ethical principles as the basis for prescribing required standards of behaviour for members of a profession. They also seek to set out the expectations that the profession and society have of its members. The primary value of a professional code of conduct is not as a checklist for disciplining non-conforming members, although breaches of a code of conduct usually do carry a professional disciplinary consequence. Rather, its primary value is to act as a prompt sheet for the promotion of ethical decision-making by members of that profession. Prevalent Bioethical Issues
a. )Abortion is defined as the expulsion of a fetus from the
uterus before 28 weeks' gestation, the arbitrarily established time of viability. An abortion is a procedure to end a pregnancy. It uses medicine or surgery to remove the embryo or fetus and placenta from the uterus. The procedure is done by a licensed health care professional. b.) Euthanasia, also called mercy killing, act or practice of painlessly putting to death persons suffering from painful and incurable disease or incapacitating physical disorder or allowing them to die by withholding treatment or withdrawing artificial life-support measures. Prevalent Bioethical Issues
c.) Suicide is the act of intentionally causing one's own death.
d.) Clinical Death is when your heart stops pumping blood and the person stops breathing. Without CPR, Biological Death begins to set in about 4-6 minutes later. This results in oxygen not entering the body and the organs, especially the brain, which affects brain function. Biological Death is where the victim's brain is damaged and cells in the victim's heart, brain and other organs die from a lack of oxygen. The damage caused by Biological Death is irreversible. If this condition is not quickly corrected, then biological death will occur which is when the brain has been deprived of blood and oxygen long enough and the cells begin to die. Prevalent Bioethical Issues
e.) In vitro fertilization (IVF) is a method of assisted
reproduction in which a man's sperm and a woman's eggs are combined outside of the body in a laboratory dish. One or more fertilized eggs (embryos) may be transferred to the woman's uterus, where they may implant in the uterine lining and develop. f.) In stem cell transplants, stem cells replace cells damaged by chemotherapy or disease or serve as a way for the donor's immune system to fight some types of cancer and blood-related diseases, such as leukemia, lymphoma, neuroblastoma and multiple myeloma. These transplants use adult stem cells or umbilical cord blood. Studies have discovered that stem cell therapy can help enhance the growth of new healthy skin tissue, enhance collagen production, stimulate hair development after incisions or loss, and help substitute scar tissue with newly developed healthy tissue.