Abstract

BackgroundImportance of awareness of medical ethics and its integration into medical curriculum has been frequently highlighted. Study 1 aimed to assess the knowledge, attitude, and reported practices of medical ethics among clinicians at Patan Academy of Health Sciences, a tertiary care teaching hospital in Nepal. Study 2 was conducted to assess whether there was a difference in knowledge, attitude, and reported practices of medical ethics among doctors who received formal medical ethics education during undergraduate studies and those who did not.MethodsTwo cross-sectional surveys using self-administered questionnaires were conducted. Study 1 included 72 participants; interns, medical officers, and consultants working at Patan Academy of Health Sciences. Study 2 was a comparative study conducted among 54 medical officers who had received formal medical ethics education (Group 1) and 60 medical officers who did not (Group 2).ResultsParticipants who had completed post-graduate education had higher knowledge (p = 0.050), practice (p < 0.001), and overall combined scores (p = 0.011). Participants with ethics education had higher knowledge (p < 0.001), attitude (p = 0.001), practice (p < 0.001), and overall score (p < 0.001). Most participants preferred consulting colleagues if an ethical dilemma arose. Fewer participants had heard of the Declaration of Helsinki. Most participants thought doctors to be most capable of judging what is best for the patient (Study 1: 70.42%, Study 2 Group 1: 42.59%, Group 2: 80%). Case scenarios in which participants demonstrated poor practice were ethical issues concerning truth-telling, end-of-life decisions, treating HIV/AIDS patients, treating a minor, and reporting colleague’s errors.ConclusionsThis study found that participants who have received medical ethics education have higher knowledge, attitude, and practice scores. The results further justify the need for medical ethics education to be a part of the core medical curriculum. A blame-free environment where seniors can be approached for advice should be created. Research ethics should also be given attention. During medical ethics training, ethical issues where doctors perform poorly should be given more priority and should be discussed in a country-specific context.

Highlights

  • Importance of awareness of medical ethics and its integration into medical curriculum has been frequently highlighted

  • It incorporates four major subdivisions: (1) clinical ethics, which deals with issues arising during patient care, (2) research ethics which deals with issues arising during healthcare research, (3) professional ethics, which deals with professional conduct, duties, and responsibilities of healthcare professionals, (4) public policy ethics which deals with the formulation of laws regulating bioethical issues [2]

  • Questions were asked whether respondents knew about the presence or absence of a clinical ethics committee and legal advisor at Patan Academy of Health Sciences (PAHS) and who they thought was the most capable of judging what is best for the patient

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Summary

Introduction

Importance of awareness of medical ethics and its integration into medical curriculum has been frequently highlighted. Bioethics or biomedical ethics is a broad term for the study of moral issues occurring in medicine, healthcare, and biological sciences It incorporates four major subdivisions: (1) clinical ethics, which deals with issues arising during patient care, (2) research ethics which deals with issues arising during healthcare research, (3) professional ethics, which deals with professional conduct, duties, and responsibilities of healthcare professionals, (4) public policy ethics which deals with the formulation of laws regulating bioethical issues [2]. Medical ethics falls under the professional ethics subdivision of bioethics and deals with conduct in the medical profession and dilemmas arising during medical practice Terms such as medical ethics and clinical ethics are often used interchangeably, though there are subtle differences. It includes the Hippocratic Oath and code of ethics compiled by the governing medical authority of the particular country [2, 4]

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