Psychiatric Research Centre, Örebro County Council, Box 1613, SE 701 16, Örebro, Sweden.
BMC Med Ethics. 2013 Dec 6;14:49. doi: 10.1186/1472-6939-14-49.
Psychiatric staff members have the power to decide the options that frame encounters with patients. Intentional as well as unintentional framing can have a crucial impact on patients' opportunities to be heard and participate in the process. We identified three dominant ethical perspectives in the normative medical ethics literature concerning how doctors and other staff members should frame interactions in relation to patients; paternalism, autonomy and reciprocity. The aim of this study was to describe and analyse statements describing real work situations and ethical reflections made by staff members in relation to three central perspectives in medical ethics; paternalism, autonomy and reciprocity.
All staff members involved with patients in seven adult psychiatric and six child and adolescent psychiatric clinics were given the opportunity to freely describe ethical considerations in their work by keeping an ethical diary over the course of one week and 173 persons handed in their diaries. Qualitative theory-guided content analysis was used to provide a description of staff encounters with patients and in what way these encounters were consistent with, or contrary to, the three perspectives.
The majority of the statements could be attributed to the perspective of paternalism and several to autonomy. Only a few statements could be attributed to reciprocity, most of which concerned staff members acting contrary to the perspective. The result is presented as three perspectives containing eight values.•Paternalism; 1) promoting and restoring the health of the patient, 2) providing good care and 3) assuming responsibility.•Autonomy; 1) respecting the patient's right to self-determination and information, 2) respecting the patient's integrity and 3) protecting human rights.•Reciprocity; 1) involving patients in the planning and implementation of their care and 2) building trust between staff and patients.
Paternalism clearly appeared to be the dominant perspective among the participants, but there was also awareness of patients' right to autonomy. Despite a normative trend towards reciprocity in psychiatry throughout the Western world, identifying it proved difficult in this study. This should be borne in mind by clinics when considering the need for ethical education, training and supervision.
精神科医务人员有权决定与患者接触的方式。有意或无意的框架会对患者获得倾听和参与治疗过程的机会产生至关重要的影响。我们在规范医学伦理学文献中确定了三个主导的伦理观点,即医生和其他医务人员应该如何与患者互动;家长主义、自主性和互惠性。本研究的目的是描述和分析工作人员在与医学伦理的三个中心观点相关的工作环境中,对三个主要观点(家长主义、自主性和互惠性)进行描述和分析的陈述。
向参与七个成人精神病学和六个儿童和青少年精神病学诊所患者的所有工作人员提供机会,通过在一周内记录伦理日记,自由描述工作中的伦理考虑因素,共有 173 人提交了日记。使用定性理论导向的内容分析,对工作人员与患者的接触进行描述,并说明这些接触与三个观点一致或相反的方式。
大多数陈述可以归因于家长主义观点,而一些陈述可以归因于自主性观点。只有少数陈述可以归因于互惠性观点,其中大部分涉及工作人员违反该观点的行为。结果呈现为三个包含八个价值观的观点。
家长主义:1)促进和恢复患者的健康,2)提供良好的护理,3)承担责任。
自主性:1)尊重患者的自决权和知情权,2)尊重患者的完整性,3)保护人权。
互惠性:1)让患者参与他们的护理计划和实施,2)在工作人员和患者之间建立信任。
家长主义显然是参与者中占主导地位的观点,但也意识到了患者的自主性权利。尽管在整个西方世界,精神病学中存在规范性的互惠趋势,但在这项研究中,识别它证明是困难的。这一点应该引起诊所的注意,在考虑伦理教育、培训和监督的必要性时,需要加以考虑。