Padela A I, Shanawani H, Greenlaw J, Hamid H, Aktas M, Chin N
University of Rochester Medical Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Box 655, Rochester, NY 14642, USA.
J Med Ethics. 2008 May;34(5):365-9. doi: 10.1136/jme.2007.021345.
Islam and Muslims are underrepresented in the medical literature and the influence of physician's cultural beliefs and religious values upon the clinical encounter has been understudied.
To elicit the perceived influence of Islam upon the practice patterns of immigrant Muslim physicians in the USA.
Ten face-to-face, in-depth, semistructured interviews with Muslim physicians from various backgrounds and specialties trained outside the USA and practising within the the country. Data were analysed according to the conventions of qualitative research using a modified grounded-theory approach.
There were a variety of views on the role of Islam in medical practice. Several themes emerged from our interviews: (1) a trend to view Islam as enhancing virtuous professional behaviour; (2) the perception of Islam as influencing the scope of medical practice through setting boundaries on career choices, defining acceptable medical procedures and shaping social interactions with physician peers; (3) a perceived need for Islamic religious experts within Islamic medical ethical deliberation.
This is a pilot study intended to yield themes and hypotheses for further investigation and is not meant to fully characterise Muslim physicians at large.
Immigrant Muslim physicians practising within the USA perceive Islam to play a variable role within their clinical practice, from influencing interpersonal relations and character development to affecting specialty choice and procedures performed. Areas of ethical challenges identified include catering to populations with lifestyles at odds with Islamic teachings, end-of-life care and maintaining a faith identity within the culture of medicine. Further study of the interplay between Islam and Muslim medical practice and the manner and degree to which Islamic values and law inform ethical decision-making is needed.
伊斯兰教和穆斯林群体在医学文献中的呈现不足,医生的文化信仰和宗教价值观对临床诊疗过程的影响尚未得到充分研究。
探究伊斯兰教对美国移民穆斯林医生执业模式的潜在影响。
对10名在美国境外接受培训并在美国执业的、来自不同背景和专业的穆斯林医生进行了面对面的深入半结构化访谈。采用改良的扎根理论方法,根据定性研究的惯例对数据进行分析。
对于伊斯兰教在医疗实践中的作用存在多种观点。我们的访谈中出现了几个主题:(1)倾向于认为伊斯兰教能促进良好的职业行为;(2)认为伊斯兰教通过限制职业选择范围、界定可接受的医疗程序以及塑造与同行医生的社会互动来影响医疗实践的范围;(3)在伊斯兰医学伦理审议中认为需要伊斯兰宗教专家。
这是一项试点研究,旨在得出可供进一步研究的主题和假设,并非旨在全面描述广大穆斯林医生的情况。
在美国执业的移民穆斯林医生认为伊斯兰教在他们的临床实践中发挥着多种作用,从影响人际关系和性格发展到影响专业选择和所执行的程序。确定的伦理挑战领域包括迎合与伊斯兰教教义相悖的生活方式人群、临终关怀以及在医学文化中保持信仰身份。需要进一步研究伊斯兰教与穆斯林医疗实践之间的相互作用,以及伊斯兰价值观和法律为伦理决策提供信息的方式和程度。