Understanding the ethical implications of the rituals of medicine (original) (raw)

2020, Internal Medicine Journal

Rituals may be understood broadly as stereotyped behaviours carrying symbolic meanings, which play a crucial role in defining relationships, legitimating authority, giving meaning to certain life events and stabilising social structures. Despite intense interest in the subject, and an extensive literature, relatively little attention has been given to the nature, role and function of ritual in contemporary medicine. Medicine is replete with ritualistic behaviours and imperatives, which play a crucial role in all aspects of clinical practice. Rituals play multiple, complex functions in clinical interactions and have an important role in shaping interactions, experiences and outcomes. Longstanding medical rituals have been disrupted in the wake of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Medical rituals may be evident or invisible, often overlap with or operate alongside instrumentalised practices, and play crucial roles in establishing, maintaining and guaranteeing the efficacy of clinical practices. Rituals can also inhibit progress and change, by enforcing arbitrary authority. Physicians should consider when they are undertaking a ritual practice and recognise when the exigencies of contemporary practice are affecting that ritual with or without meaning or intention. Physicians should reflect on whether aspects of their ritual interactions are undertaken on the basis of sentiment, custom or evidence-based outcomes, and whether rituals should be defended, continued in a modified fashion or even abandoned in favour of new behaviours suitable for and salient with contemporary practice in the interests of patient care.

Medical rites:'Priestly'power in modern healthcare

Scottish Journal of Healthcare Chaplaincy, 2009

Abstract: Patients and their families are often concerned to find a material cause for suffering rather than to accept the mystery of its ontological necessity. In modern healthcare settings, in which medicine is rightly based upon the reductionist empirical scientific method, ...

Ethics of the Ordinary–A meeting run by the Royal Society of Medicine with the Royal College of General Practitioners

London …, 2011

E thics has long been recognized as an integral element of primary health care 1. Despite the ubiquity of ethical challenges and dilemmas in primary care, it remains a neglected domain in the world of bioethics. Accordingly, there have been calls to explore the ethical dimensions of primary healthcare 2,3 On February 15 th 2011, the Royal Society of Medicine ran a conference in association with the Royal College of General Practitioners in order to fulfil this need.

Challenges in preserving the “good doctor” norm: physicians' discourses on changes to the medical logic during the initial wave of the COVID-19 pandemic

Frontiers in Psychology, 2023

Introduction: The COVID-pandemic was a tremendous challenge to the practice of modern medicine. In this study, we use neo-institutional theory to gain an in-depth understanding of how physicians in Sweden narrate how they position themselves as physicians when practicing modern medicine during the first wave of the pandemic. At focus is medical logic, which integrates rules and routines based on medical evidence, practical experience, and patient perspectives in clinical decision-making. Methods: To understand how physicians construct their versions of the pandemic and how it impacted the medical logic in which they practice, we analyzed the interviews from physicians in Sweden by discursive psychology. Results: The interpretative repertoires showed how COVID-created an experience of knowledge vacuum in medical logic and how physicians dealt with clinical patient dilemmas. They had to find unorthodox ways to rebuild a sense of medical evidence while still being responsible for clinical decision-making for patients with critical care needs. Discussion: In the knowledge vacuum occurring during the first wave of COVID-, physicians could not use their common medical knowledge nor rely on published evidence or their clinical judgment. They were thus challenged in their norm of being the "good doctor". One practical implication of this research is that it provides a rich empirical account where physicians are allowed to mirror, make sense, and normalize their own individual and sometimes painful struggle to uphold the professional role and related medical responsibility in the early phases of the COVID-pandemic. It will be important to follow how the tremendous challenge of COVID-to medical logic plays out over time in the community of physicians. There are many dimensions to study, with sick leave, burnout, and attrition being some interesting areas.

At the Sharp End of Medical Care Healing and Reconnecting Through Ritual

Coping Rituals in Fearful Times, 2022

Trauma is a fact of life. Nearly all people have or will experience terrifying events. Fortunately, not all bear the long-term effects of trauma associated with sophisticated modern medical procedures. The fact that medical interventions can cause psychophysiological trauma is a well-kept secret. Patients, their entourage, and medical professionals may all find themselves at the sharp end of medical care. The rituals surrounding medical procedures can serve to reduce fear, prevent disruption, and maintain order for all three of these groups.

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