Gallagher Siun, Little Miles
Centre for Values, Ethics and the Law in Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Medical Foundation Building K25, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, 2006, Australia.
Health Care Anal. 2017 Dec;25(4):370-385. doi: 10.1007/s10728-016-0322-6.
Doctors are increasingly enjoined by their professional organisations to involve themselves in supraclinical advocacy, which embraces activities focused on changing practice and the system in order to address the social determinants of health. The moral basis for doctors' decisions on whether or not to do so has been the subject of little empirical research. This opportunistic qualitative study of the values of medical graduates associated with the Sydney Medical School explores the processes that contribute to doctors' decisions about taking up the advocate role. Our findings show that personal ideals were more important than professional commitments in shaping doctors' decisions on engagement in advocacy. Experiences in early life and during training, including exposure to power and powerlessness, significantly influenced their role choices. Doctors included supraclinical advocacy in their mature practices if it satisfied their desire to achieve excellence. These findings suggest that common approaches to promoting and facilitating advocacy as an individual professional obligation are not fully congruent with the experiences and values of doctors that are significant in creating the advocate. It would seem important to understand better the moral commitments inherent in advocacy to inform future developments in codes of medical ethics and medical education programs.
医生越来越多地受到其专业组织的要求,参与超临床倡导活动,这包括旨在改变医疗实践和医疗体系以解决健康的社会决定因素的活动。医生决定是否参与此类活动的道德依据很少成为实证研究的主题。这项对悉尼医学院医学毕业生价值观的机会主义定性研究,探讨了促成医生决定承担倡导者角色的过程。我们的研究结果表明,在塑造医生参与倡导活动的决定时,个人理想比职业承诺更为重要。早年和培训期间的经历,包括体验权力和无力感,对他们的角色选择产生了重大影响。如果超临床倡导活动满足了医生追求卓越的愿望,他们就会将其纳入成熟的医疗实践中。这些发现表明,将倡导作为个人职业义务来促进和推动的常见方法,与在塑造倡导者过程中对医生具有重要意义的经历和价值观并不完全一致。更好地理解倡导活动中固有的道德承诺,对于为未来医学伦理准则和医学教育项目的发展提供信息似乎很重要。