Ethical Principles
Advocacy: The asymmetrical power relationship of the caregiver and the patient requires that the caregiver take great care to protect the patient, and place the patient’s needs first.
Autonomy: The patient is free to express his/her own decisions in healthcare matters. In the event that a patient is unable or incompetent to express their wishes, two other standards can be applied, with substituted judgment taking precedence over best interests:
Substituted Judgement: if the patient is unable or incompetent to express their autonomous wishes, and a surrogate exists who knows the patient’s belief system well, they can express what they feel the patient would have wanted for himself
Best Interests: if the patient is unable to express their autonomous wishes, a surrogate can weigh the risks and benefits of treatment as they affect the patient’s quality of life, and try to make a treatment choice that would lead to the best quality of life based as much as possible on the values of the patient
Beneficence: Regardless of the patient’s ability to pay for services, the medical team is committed to providing whatever care the patient’s condition demands and which the team is competent to provide.
Compassion: The patient should be offered a quality of care that acknowledges the pain and suffering of the patient and offers forms of human connection which attempt to relieve suffering.
Justice: The healthcare team is responsible for balancing the appropriate resources and treatments with the knowledge of possible burdens they may place on the patient, the family, the hospital resources and society. The burdens should not outweigh the benefits
NonMalificence: When a medical treatment does not promote the patient’s well-being, either by relieving suffering or addressing and reversing a pathologic process, there is no longer an ethical obligation to provide it. This includes treatments that are deemed futile and those that may cause additional suffering. Communication with the family is most crucial in these instances so that a feeling of abandonment is not created
Principle of Double Effect: when a given act has two consequences, one good and intended, and the other bad and unintended although foreseen, it is ethically permissible to do this act if the four conditions are met:
The intended act itself is not immoral (murder, active euthanasia)
The act was undertaken with the intent only of achieving the good effect, even though the possibility of the bad effect could be foreseen
The act does not achieve the good effect by means of the bad effect
The act itself is undertaken only for a proportionately serious reason
Futility: a futile treatment either
cannot be performed because of the patient’s biologic condition
cannot produce the intended physiologic effect, or
cannot reasonably be expected to produce the benefit which is sought
A treatment who’s burdens, harms or costs outweigh the potential benefit is NOT futile
Competence: a person’s capacity to make rational decisions regarding their own well-being