Imperfect by design: the problematic ethics of surgical training

Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (5):350-353 (2021)
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Abstract

There exists in academic medicine a core ethical issue that is seldom pursued: trainees are frequently not the best person in the operating room at a given intervention being performed, and yet as a profession we understand a fundamental need to afford them opportunities to perform. Academic centres are traditionally associated with a higher quality of care than non-academic centres, suggesting that practical measures exist within teaching hospitals that effectively mask the clinical discrepancies between trainees and their preceptors. Nonetheless, we are bound by our ethical commitments as physicians to balance the obligations of care with the duty to teach. In order to ethically validate the model of ‘surgeon as teacher’, we propose that there must be a reconciliation of the tensions between traditional professional values in medicine with the constraints inherent in a time-bound utilitarian medical system. Ultimately, we must consciously accept that ensuring the longitudinal availability of skilled surgeons in society aligns more closely with our core ethical obligations as outlined in the social contract that medical professionals maintain with the general public than does the ethical demand to provide unreservedly individual-focused patient care. It is the duty of individual practitioners, as a necessity of lineage to maintain and fulfil our greater duties to society, to foster deontological relationships where possible within this utilitarian system while accepting short-term imperfection in our practice. There are no data in this manuscript.

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Citations of this work

Triage, consent and trusting black boxes.Kenneth Boyd - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (5):289-290.
Medical Machines: The Expanding Role of Ethics in Technology-Driven Healthcare.Connor Brenna - 2021 - Canadian Journal of Bioethics / Revue canadienne de bioéthique 4 (1):107-111.

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References found in this work

An analytic approach to resolving problems in medical ethics.D. Candee & B. Puka - 1984 - Journal of Medical Ethics 10 (2):61-70.
Ethics and high-value care.Matthew DeCamp & Jon C. Tilburt - 2017 - Journal of Medical Ethics 43 (5):307-309.

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