From the Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, The Ohio State University; Division of Plastic Surgery, University of Massachusetts Medical School; Department of Surgery, AIC Kijabe Hospital; Department of Surgery, University of Zimbabwe College of Health Sciences; Shriners Ambulatory Clinic; and Division of Plastic Surgery, University of California, San Diego.
Plast Reconstr Surg. 2022 Apr 1;149(4):789e-799e. doi: 10.1097/PRS.0000000000008957.
As more of the world's resources are directed toward improving patient access to safe surgical and anesthesia care, there is a growing concern that volunteer surgeons' "desire to help" has numerous unintended consequences. The purpose of this study was to ask in-country, local surgeons and visiting volunteer plastic surgeons about the frequency of ethical dilemmas for different types of global surgery collaborations and to assess their perception of compliance with the concepts of autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice.
A cross-sectional email survey tool was sent to a representative sample of domestic American Society of Plastic Surgeons members, all international members of the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, and international partners of the Volunteers in Plastic Surgery committee of the Plastic Surgery Foundation. The survey response rate was 7.7 percent, with 356 respondents from 65 countries.
This survey data showed a statistically significant divergence of perspectives between local and visiting surgeons in regard to scope of practice, quality of patient care, impact on local health care systems, perception of the quality of care by local providers, the integrity of the informed consent process, and photography in global plastic surgery collaborations. Though the short-term mission trip model was particularly polarizing when comparing the responses of local and visiting surgeons, educational and research exchanges may also significantly interrupt local health care and incite ethical lapses.
This survey provides quantitative insight into the impact of current global plastic surgery collaborations and highlights ethical areas of disagreement between local and visiting surgeons.
随着全球更多资源被投入到改善患者获得安全外科和麻醉护理的机会中,人们越来越担心志愿者外科医生的“帮助意愿”会带来许多意想不到的后果。本研究旨在询问国内的本地外科医生和来访的志愿整形外科医生,不同类型的全球外科学术合作中出现伦理困境的频率,并评估他们对自主、善行、不伤害和公正等概念的遵守情况的看法。
采用横断面电子邮件调查工具,向美国整形外科医生协会的国内代表成员、美国整形外科医生协会的所有国际成员以及整形外科基金会志愿外科学会委员会的国际合作伙伴发送了调查工具。调查的回复率为 7.7%,来自 65 个国家的 356 名受访者参与了调查。
这项调查数据显示,在实践范围、患者护理质量、对当地医疗保健系统的影响、当地提供者对护理质量的看法、知情同意过程的完整性以及全球整形外科学术合作中的摄影等方面,本地外科医生和来访外科医生的观点存在统计学上显著的分歧。虽然短期任务旅行模式在比较本地和来访外科医生的反应时特别两极分化,但教育和研究交流也可能严重干扰当地的医疗保健并引发道德失误。
本调查提供了对当前全球整形外科学术合作的影响的定量见解,并突出了本地和来访外科医生之间在伦理方面存在分歧的领域。