Abstract

Physicians must be proficient in and efficient at various lifesaving and life-sustaining procedures. Multiple methods exist to teach these skills to inexperienced medical professionals, ranging from lectures to practical models to live patients. Proficiency and prior knowledge are especially important when novice medical trainees first perform these procedures because of the increased risk of harm in these high-stakes scenarios. To mitigate inherent risks, many medical centers controversially advocate and allow the use of newly deceased patients to practice, teach, and perfect these procedures. As a result, this type of experience facilitates medical training and competency while simultaneously avoiding physical harm to living patients. Nonetheless, it raises numerous ethical and legal considerations, including concerns of damage to the doctor-patient relationship.This manuscript aims to comprehensively review the ethicality of practicing postmortem procedures and its current debate regarding the role and type of consent. This is followed by examining scenarios where the prior patient or postmortem surrogate consent is required for procedures that do not benefit the patient, including organ donation, cadaver donation, and brain tissue donation. Using these scenarios as a framework, best practices for gaining permission to use the newly deceased for medical training purposes are offered.Procedures on deceased patients should always be done under competent supervision in a structured manner, with comprehensive explanations to encourage accountability and professionalism and prevent misuse. Informed consent for all educational procedures must be obtained by individuals separate from the treatment team. However, exceptions to this standard could be made in pediatrics (especially in the neonatal intensive care unit) given the intimate relationship between providers and parents. Depending on the situation, consent should be obtained from the patient and/or their family, with separate documentation provided to create awareness. All relative parties should be consented after receiving appropriate time to process to prevent further emotional compromise. If there are concerns about jeopardizing the family and creating further burdens, they should not be approached.

Highlights

  • BackgroundThe medical profession is an amalgamation of art, humanism, and science one must master to become a skilled clinician

  • McNamara and others found that of the 63% of emergency medicine training programs and 58% of neonatal critical care centers that allow procedures to be practiced on patients after death, only 10% obtained family consent [14]

  • Making this practice illegal may lead to further secrecy and ethical violations under a lack of oversight, creating further complications from unsuccessful procedures. Instead, permitting this practice would allow for discussion regarding informed consent, respect for the deceased, and its ethicality. This would parallel the use of the Pernkopf Atlas in anatomy, where the unethical use of anatomical drawings of victims of the Nazi regime can be used as an ethical teaching point

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Summary

Introduction

The medical profession is an amalgamation of art, humanism, and science one must master to become a skilled clinician. Many medical centers allow trainees to practice procedures on newly deceased patients For novice trainees, this practice allows them to attain procedural skills with an understanding of varying circumstances and anatomic variants while causing minimal harm to deceased patients [1]. This practice allows them to attain procedural skills with an understanding of varying circumstances and anatomic variants while causing minimal harm to deceased patients [1] Despite this method serving a dual purpose by teaching physicians and allowing them to serve the public, How to cite this article Rajagopal A S, Champney T H (December 02, 2020) Teaching Without Harm: The Ethics of Performing Posthumous Procedures on the Newly Deceased. Examining these facets will subsequently assist in delineating the best ethical approach overall

Ethical considerations to using newly deceased patients
Ethical considerations regarding the role of consent
Conclusions
Disclosures
Hudson TS
Findings
Feinberg J
Full Text
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