Professional Regulation, Law, and Ethics
Syed Amin Tabish
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Syed Amin Tabish: Sher-i-Kashmir Inst. of Medical Sciences
Chapter Chapter 26 in Health Care Management: Principles and Practice, 2024, pp 523-557 from Springer
Abstract:
Abstract The foundation of medical professionalism and ethics is trust, truth, human values, and strong societal commitment. Understanding and applying the law, professional ethical code, and guidelines, along with ethics, are integral aspects of professionalism in medical practice. These elements are interconnected and play crucial roles in ensuring high standards of care and behavior for medical professionals. Human rights establish the minimum enforceable standards for how individuals should be treated, while ethics define customary standards for interpersonal behavior within a specific society. Consequently, patient rights are derived from medical and social ethical principles. Medical ethics acts as a bridge between theoretical bioethics and practical patient care, aiming to improve the quality of care by addressing ethical dilemmas that arise in practice. The principles of ethics in medical practice are: beneficence (doing good), non-maleficence (to do no harm), autonomy (giving the patient the freedom to choose freely, where they are able), and justice (ensuring fairness). The primary duty of the physician is to promote the health and well-being of individual patients by providing competent, timely, and compassionate care in accordance with good medical practice and professionalism. The physician must provide care with the utmost respect for human life and dignity and for the autonomy and rights of the patient. The physician must practice medicine fairly and justly. The physician must strive to use health care resources in a way that optimally benefits the patient. The physician must practice with conscience, honesty, integrity, and accountability while always exercising independent professional judgment and maintaining the highest standards of professional conduct. Physicians must take responsibility for their individual medical decisions and must not alter their sound professional medical judgments on the basis of instructions contrary to medical considerations. The law relating to medicine and healthcare has become increasingly complex and patients are becoming more aware of their legal rights and the ethical principles which underline these rights. This has significant consequences for healthcare practices, the regulation of healthcare, and the relationships between patients and members of healthcare teams. This includes complex areas like patient information and consent, legal and professional regulation of healthcare professionals, clinical negligence, and beginning and end-of-life issues. The medical field is constantly growing more and more sophisticated, and there is an ever-increasing need for strong leaders to tackle and advise on the many changes to medical law. Medical law encompasses everything from medical malpractice to drug regulation. Without medical lawyers, many wronged patients would find themselves without recourse.
Date: 2024
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-981-97-3879-3_26
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DOI: 10.1007/978-981-97-3879-3_26
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