Your browser doesn't support javascript.
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 11 de 11
Filter
5.
AMA J Ethics ; 23(3): E265-270, 2021 03 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-1116155

ABSTRACT

Increasing focus on health equity is placing a spotlight on health professionals' roles. Recent public health crises-the opioid epidemic, maternal mortality, and the COVID-19 pandemic-have renewed focus on racial and ethnic inequity and underscored that trust is foundational to public health and health professionalism. Organizational, system, and policy reform demand that professionalism be redefined in terms of its capacity to motivate equity in health professions education and clinical practice.


Subject(s)
Health Equity , Health Personnel/standards , Professionalism/ethics , Public Health/ethics , Humans , Role , Social Responsibility
7.
Postgrad Med J ; 96(1141): 711-717, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-901414

ABSTRACT

Facing an investigation into performance concerns can be one of the most traumatic events in a doctor's career, and badly handled investigations can lead to severe distress. Yet there is no systematic way for National Health Service (NHS) Trusts to record the frequency of investigations, and extremely little data on the long-term outcomes of such action for the doctors. The document-Maintaining High Professional Standards in the Modern NHS (a framework for the initial investigation of concerns about doctors and dentists in the NHS)-should protect doctors from facing unfair or mismanaged performance management procedures, which include conduct, capability and health. Equally, it provides NHS Trusts with a framework that must be adhered to when managing performance concerns regarding doctors. Yet, very few doctors have even heard of it or know about the provisions it contains for their protection, and the implementation of the framework appears to be very variable across NHS Trusts. By empowering all doctors with the knowledge of what performance management procedures exist and how best practice should be implemented, we aim to ensure that they are informed participants in any investigation should it occur.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence/standards , Physicians , Professional Practice , Professionalism , Work Performance/standards , Humans , Liability, Legal , Medical Errors/legislation & jurisprudence , Medical Errors/prevention & control , Personnel Management/methods , Physicians/psychology , Physicians/standards , Professional Practice/organization & administration , Professional Practice/standards , Professionalism/ethics , Professionalism/legislation & jurisprudence , Professionalism/standards , State Medicine/standards , United Kingdom , Workforce/organization & administration
8.
Acad Med ; 95(10): 1488-1491, 2020 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: covidwho-811250

ABSTRACT

In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Association of American Medical Colleges has called for a temporary suspension of clinical teaching activities for medical students. Planning for the continued involvement of learners in patient care during this pandemic should include teaching learners professional formation. The authors provide an ethical framework to guide such teaching, based on the ethical principle of beneficence and the professional virtues of courage and self-sacrifice from professional ethics in medicine. The authors show that these concepts support the conclusion that learners are ethically obligated to accept reasonable, but not unreasonable, risk. Based on this ethical framework, the authors provide an account of the process of teaching professional formation that medical educators and academic leaders should implement. Medical educators and academic leaders should embrace the opportunity that the COVID-19 pandemic presents for teaching professional formation. Learners should acquire the conceptual vocabulary of professional formation. Learners should recognize that risk of infection from patients is unavoidable. Learners should become aware of established ethical standards for professional responsibility during epidemics from the history of medicine. Learners should master understandable fear. Medical educators and academic leaders should ensure that didactic teaching of professional formation continues when it becomes justified to end learners' participation in the processes of patient care; topics should include the professionally responsible management of scarce medical resources. The COVID-19 pandemic will not be the last major infectious disease that puts learners at risk. Professional ethics in medicine provides powerful conceptual tools that can be used as an ethical framework to guide medical educators to teach learners, who will bear leadership responsibilities in responses to future pandemics, professional formation.


Subject(s)
Education, Medical/ethics , Ethics, Medical/education , Pandemics/ethics , Professionalism/education , Betacoronavirus , COVID-19 , Coronavirus Infections , Humans , Pneumonia, Viral , Professionalism/ethics , SARS-CoV-2 , Schools, Medical , Societies, Medical
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL