Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Department of Legal Medicine and Bioethics, Faculty of Dental Medicine, Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy, 020021 Bucharest, Romania.
Medicina (Kaunas). 2022 Sep 14;58(9):1278. doi: 10.3390/medicina58091278.
The ethical framework of cosmetic surgery is distinct from the one associated with clinical medicine. This distinctiveness has led to significant difficulties in conceptualizing the physician-patient relationship (PPR), as most models have been developed specifically for the latter. The purpose of this article is to show that the PPR in cosmetic surgery can be better described through a distinct approach that we name the anti-paternalistic model of the PPR, and we will briefly present the differences between it and autonomy-based models. We will analyze the principle of non-interference, the variable degree of autonomy of both the patient and the physician within this relationship, the handling of the relevant information, the principle of beneficence as satisfaction, the difficulties regarding the informed consent, the algorithm allowing for the refusal of the procedure, and children-related issues. Based on this analysis, we will show that an anti-paternalistic model of the PPR is preferable to an autonomy-based one, as it allows for better clarification of the underlying ethical issues involved in cosmetic surgery.
整形手术的伦理框架有别于与临床医学相关的伦理框架。这种独特性导致了医患关系(PPR)概念化的重大困难,因为大多数模型都是专门为后者开发的。本文的目的是表明,通过我们称之为医患关系反家长式模型的独特方法,可以更好地描述整形手术中的医患关系,我们将简要介绍它与基于自主的模型之间的区别。我们将分析不干涉原则、在这种关系中患者和医生的自主权程度的可变性、相关信息的处理、作为满意的善行原则、知情同意的困难、允许拒绝手术的算法以及与儿童有关的问题。基于此分析,我们将表明,与基于自主的模型相比,医患关系的反家长式模型更可取,因为它可以更好地阐明整形手术中涉及的潜在伦理问题。