Rentmeester Christy A
Center for Health Policy and Ethics, Creighton University, 2500 California Plaza, Chpe 202, Omaha, NE 68178, USA.
J Med Philos. 2008 Feb;33(1):27-43. doi: 10.1093/jmp/jhm006.
Health care professionals' and trainees' conceptions of their responsibilities to patients can change over time for a number of reasons: evolving career goals, desires to serve different patient populations, and changing family obligations, for example. Some changes in conceptions of responsibility are healthy, but others express moral damage. Clinicians' changes in their conceptions of what they are responsible for express moral damage when their responses to others express a meager, rather than robust, sense of what they owe others. At least two important expressions of moral damage in the context of health care are these: callousness and divestiture. Callousness describes the poor condition of a clinician's capacity for moral perception; when her capacity to accurately appreciate features of moral relevance that configure others' needs, vulnerabilities, and desert of care diminishes, such that she fails to respond with care to those for whom she has duties to care, she is callous. Callousness has been explored in detail elsewhere,1 and so the focus of this paper is divestiture. A clinician divests when the value of responding with care to others becomes less centrally and importantly constitutive of his personal and professional identity. Divestiture has important consequences for patients and health professions education, which I will explore here.
例如,职业目标的演变、服务不同患者群体的愿望以及家庭义务的变化。责任观念的某些变化是健康的,但其他变化则表现出道德损害。当临床医生对他人的回应表现出对自己亏欠他人的微薄而非强烈的认知时,他们对自己责任观念的改变就表现出道德损害。在医疗保健背景下,道德损害至少有两种重要表现:冷漠和剥离。冷漠描述了临床医生道德感知能力的不良状态;当她准确理解构成他人需求、脆弱性和应得关怀的道德相关特征的能力下降,以至于她未能对自己有责任照顾的人给予关怀回应时,她就是冷漠的。冷漠在其他地方已有详细探讨,1 因此本文的重点是剥离。当对他人给予关怀回应的价值在其个人和职业身份中不再占据核心和重要地位时,临床医生就会出现剥离。剥离对患者和卫生专业教育有重要影响,我将在此进行探讨。