Freeman Lauren, Stewart Heather
Kennedy Inst Ethics J. 2018;28(4):411-449. doi: 10.1353/ken.2018.0024.
This paper proposes a victim-centered account of microaggressions within the context of clinical medicine. In so doing, it argues that microaggressions can undermine physician-patient relationships, preclude relationships of trust, and therefore compromise the kind and quality of care that patients deserve. Ultimately, by focusing on the experiences of victims of microaggressions, the paper demonstrates how harmful microaggressions in clinical medical contexts can be, and thus provides strong reasons why healthcare providers ought to know about them and actively work to avoid committing them.
本文提出了一种以受害者为中心的临床医学背景下微侵犯行为的观点。在此过程中,文章认为微侵犯行为会破坏医患关系,妨碍信任关系的建立,进而损害患者应得的护理种类和质量。最终,通过关注微侵犯行为受害者的经历,本文展示了临床医学环境中的微侵犯行为可能有多么有害,从而有力地说明了医疗服务提供者为何应该了解这些行为并积极努力避免实施此类行为。