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Excerpted
from Compton´s Interactive Encyclopedia
BIOETHICS
Biology and medicine are sciences, but they are both sciences
that deal with living beings. They have direct effects on human
beings and other living species, so they quickly raise ethical
and other value problems as well as scientific ones. Bioethics
is the branch of ethics, or moral decision-making, that deals
with the problems of biology and medicine. It requires disciplined,
systematic reflection on these difficult issues.
Scientists
can change the genetic information in bacteria and are rapidly
developing the capacity to change it in many animal species, including
humans. But should they? People change the nature of the human
population by aborting defective or unwanted fetuses, by controlling
when pregnancy occurs, and by planning limits on population size.
But should they? Physicians can keep seriously ill patients alive
indefinitely, using artificial respirators, machines that take
over the control of the beating of the heart, and drugs to control
blood pressure and consciousness. But should they?
People are
beginning to ask whether there comes a time when patients should
be allowed to die. Citizens are claiming "patients´rights,"
insisting on being informed about medical procedures, and deciding
how to allocate health resources fairly. When they ask these questions
and make these decisions, they are dealing with bioethics.
PROFESSIONAL MEDICAL ETHICS
Systematic ethical thinking about these issues comes from several
different sources, including medical professions, religious traditions,
and secular, philosophical thought. The medical professions have
formulated codes that date back as far as the Hippocratic oath,
which originated on the Greek island of Cos in the 4th century
BC. The Hippocratic oath includes a pledge like those taken when
Greeks joined secret religious, philisophical, and scientific
groups. It reflects the ideas of the Pythagoreans, an important
group of the day.
Modern professional
codes date from one written by the physician Thomas Percival in
1797. It was originally written to settle a dispute in Manchester,
England, among three groups of medical specialists (physicians,
surgeons, and apothecaries). It contained statements about the
duties of physicians to one another, to patients, and to society,
as well as the duties of patients to physicians and of society
to physicians. It became the basis for the first United States
codes, written in 1847 by the American Medical Association. These
codes all emphasize that the physician´s primary duty is
to benefit the patient. Usually they assume the physician knows
what is best for the patient. In this sense they are paternalistic.
NONPROFESSIONAL BIOETHICS
One problem with the professional codes has been that they apply
only to members of a professional group. Many who are not professionally
involved in medicine do not always agree with what they say. Religious
groups, especially Jews and Roman Catholics, have for centuries
developed their own positions on many important bioethical issues.
Talmudic Judaism, for example, takes a strong stand against taking
life (including fetal life), has strict rules about autopsy, and
has special dietary laws.
Roman Catholic
moral theology emphasizes five basic principles:
(1) The principles
of stewardship. Life comes from God, and humans are "stewards"
responsible for the care of the body.
(2) The inviolability of human life. Innocent life may never purposefully
be taken in actions such as abortion, suicide, or euthanasia.
(3) The principle of totality. A part of the body exists for the
good of the whole, and therefore limbs, for example, may be amputated
if it is necessary to protect the rest of the body.
(4) The principle of double effect. In certain difficult situations,
it may be permissible to produce a bad effect in order to achieve
a good one, provided that the action undertaken is not itself
evil, that the evil is not intended, that it is not a means to
the good result, and that there is at least as much good produced
as evil. This principle justifies removing a cancerous uterus
from a woman even though she is pregnant (because the evil of
killing her fetus is indirect and unintended), but it does not
justify directly intervening to kill the fetus even if killing
the fetus might keep the woman from dying of a heart attack.
(5) The principle of sexuality. Human sexual functions exist for
two purposes: for the procreation and nurturing of children and
for the expression of the loving union within the marital bond.
Thus sexual relations outside marriage and practices involving
contraception have traditionally been condemned, though some within
this tradition have accepted certain kinds of contraception, especially
when it means that children already in the family are more responsibly
cared for.
Other religious groups, including Protestant, Eastern Orthodox,
Moslem, Hindu, and Buddhist, hold special positions on matters
of medical and biological ethics, though their positions are usually
not as well developed as those of Jews and Roman Catholics. In
addition, secular philosophical and political traditions have
increasingly developed positions on these issues. In 1972 a Patients´Bill
of Rights was drafted by a group made up of both lay people and
medical professionals.
It was the
first effort to develop a formal systematic stance on issues of
biological and medical ethics outside professional and religious
circles. It expresses ethical thought that is closely related
to that of early modern liberal political philosophers such as
John Locke and Jean-Jacques Rousseau and to the tradition of the
Founding Fathers of the United States, including Thomas Jefferson
and the writers of the Bill of Rights of the United States Constitution.
It is the first bioethical statement emphasizing the rights of
patients rather than the more paternalistic ideas that are represented
by the Hippocratic tradition.
EUTHANASIA
An example of the difference is seen in the ethical question of
how to care for a terminally ill patient. Traditionally physicians
have determined whether or not to tell a dying patient about his
or her condition by trying to judge if it would help or hurt the
patient to have the information. More recently physicians have
increasingly favored disclosure. Many favor discplosure because
they believe that the patient has the right to the information,
regardless of whether it helps or hurts.
Similar tensions
exist over the treatment of the dying patient. It is widely held
that active killing even for mercy is morally unacceptable. Holders
of this view say that it is morally more acceptable to let a patient
die than to kill for mercy. Some phillosophers argue that the
results are the same, but most hold that there is a difference--authorizing
killing would set a dangerous precedent, and it is simply wrong
to kill actively.
Virtually
all groups recognize that there are some treatments available
to dying patients that need not be given. Two criteria usually
are used to identify treatment that are morally expendable: if
they are useless or if they involve a grave burden. Traditionally
it was left to the physician to decide if a treatment was useless
or burdensome. It is now widely held, especially among those who
emphasize the rights of patients, that this judgment must be made
by the patient because it should be based on the patient´s
own beliefs, values, and religious tradition. Thus, in the United
States, an adult patient who is mentally competent is never forced
by legal means to undergo treatment against his or her wishes
(unless the treatment is for the benefit of another, such as a
vaccination or other public health measure). If the patient is
not competent, the judgment must be made by a family member. If
health professionals disagree strongly, they must seek a court
order overturning the family member´s judgment. This is
done routinely, for example, in cases of parents who refuse a
lifesaving blood transfusion for their child because of their
religious beliefs.
GENETICS
Bioethics includes questions of basic biology as well as clinical
medicine, research, and health policy. Genetics provides an example
of how clinical and broader biological ethical problems interconnect.
Medicine now has the capacity to determine the likelihood that
a child will be afflicted with a genetic disease. This can be
done to some degree by considering family history or the age of
the parents. Using techniques such as amniocentesis, chorionic
villi biopsy, and ultrasound pictures, geneticists can examine
the genetic and physical makeup of a fetus in time to abort if
the fetus is afflicted and the parents so choose. This raises
all the ethical problems of abortion, plus many more. Some people,
for example, even if they accept abortion in general, object to
the idea that a fetus with a known, specific condition can be
aborted. They do not approve of deciding whether people should
live or die based on their genetic or physical makeup. In some
cases, such as in conditions in which diseases affect only children
of one sex, the geneticist can determine the sex of the fetus
but not whether the fetus is diseased. In such a case an expectant
mother may have to choose abortion with the possibility of aborting
a normal infant. The ability to determine the sex of the fetus
also raises the possibility that some parents wanting a child
of a certain sex may choose to abort simply because the fetus
is of the unwanted sex.
Scientists
are rapidly developing the capacity to go beyond aborting fetuses
with genetic defects. They are learning how to change genetic
material, how to move genes from one species to another, and how
to replace a defective gene with a more normal one. When this
technology is perfected, it may have crucial effects on agriculture,
production of livestock, and production of drugs as well as providing
the potential to replace defective genes in humans. While the
benefits are potentially enormous, objections are also being raised.
These include concern that new species of microorganisms, for
example, may be created that could cause uncontrollable disease
or some serious, unexpected harm. The most fundamental question
raised by this new work is whether there is something basically
unethical about human attempts to change genetic codes to create
new species of animals.
OTHER
ETHICAL ISSUES
Other ethical issues arise in the relationship between the clinician
and the patient, including problems of confidentiality, informed
consent, and respect for patient autonomy. The issues also include
professional relations such as advertising, fee splitting, the
reporting of incompetent practitioners, and the ethics of referring
a patient from one physician to another.
Increasingly,
however, biological and medical ethics confronts problems that
extend beyond the isolated, individual physician-patient relationship.
The ethics of research on human subject is one such example. A
related issue is to what extent the tissues of aborted fetuses
may be used in medical research. Many ethical problems also surround
the use of alternative means of achieving pregnancy--surrogate
parenting and artificial insemination using donor sperm, for example.
Problems of public health is another area of ethical controversy--whether,
for instance, to quarantine certain individuals in danger of spreading
a disease in order to protect others, or whether to force people
to take treatments such as vaccinations and fluorides in their
water supply.
A major new
area of bioethics is the ethics of health policy and health-resource
allocation. Typical ethical problems faced by health planners
include whether people have a right to health care and whether
society has a right to force people into healthful behavior when
it may pay for their care if they become ill. The most basic health-planning
ethical problem is balancing the efficient use of health-care
resources against a more equitable distribution even when less
good is done in total. If efficiency is the dominant goal, some
who have rare diseases, who live in out-of-the-way places, or
who are members of minority groups will probably go untreated.
Robert W. Veach
BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR BIOETHICS
Bach, Julie and Bursell, Susan, eds. Biomedical Ethics (Greenhaven,
1987)
Beauchamp, T.L. and Childress, J.F. Principles of Biomedical Ethics,
2nd ed. (Oxford, 1983)
Heintze, Carl. Medical Ethics (Watts, 1987)
Langone, John. Human Engineering: Marvel or Menace? (Little, 1978).
Reich, W.T., ed. Encyclopedia of Bioethics, 4 vols. (Free Press,
1978).
Veatch, R.M. Case Studies in Medical Ethics (Harvard Univ. Press,
1977).
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