The role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practice
Abstract Emergency physicians face real‐time ethical dilemmas that may occur at any hour of the day or night. Hospital ethics committees and ethics consultation services are not always able to provide immediate responses to emergency physicians’ consultation requests. When faced with an emergent dil...
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2020-08-01
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Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12136 |
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doaj-179e592aa79c4706bc030b9f41e4ab782020-11-25T03:49:56ZengWileyJournal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open2688-11522020-08-011440340710.1002/emp2.12136The role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practiceEileen F. Baker0Joel M. Geiderman1Chadd K. Kraus2Rebecca Goett3University of Toledo College of Medicine and Life Sciences Toledo Ohio USAEmergency Medicine Department of Emergency Medicine Ruth and Harry Roman Emergency Department Cedars‐Sinai Medical Center Los Angeles California USAEmergency Medicine Geisinger Medical Center Danville Pennsylvania USAEmergency and Palliative Medicine Rutgers New Jersey Medical School Newark New Jersey USAAbstract Emergency physicians face real‐time ethical dilemmas that may occur at any hour of the day or night. Hospital ethics committees and ethics consultation services are not always able to provide immediate responses to emergency physicians’ consultation requests. When faced with an emergent dilemma, emergency physicians sometimes rely on risk management or hospital counsel to answer legal questions, but may be better served by real‐time ethics consultation. When other resources are not immediately available, emergency physicians should feel confident in making timely decisions, guided by basic principles of medical ethics. We make the following recommendations: (1) availability of a member of the hospital ethics committee to provide in‐person or telephonic consultation concurrent with patient care; (2) appointment to the hospital ethics committee of an emergency physician who is familiar with bioethical principles and is available for consultation when other ethics consultants are not; and (3) development of educational tools by professional societies or similar organizations to assist emergency physicians in making reasoned and defensible clinical ethics decisions.https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12136emergency medicine ethicsethical dilemmasethics committeeethics consultationethics policyhospital policy |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Eileen F. Baker Joel M. Geiderman Chadd K. Kraus Rebecca Goett |
spellingShingle |
Eileen F. Baker Joel M. Geiderman Chadd K. Kraus Rebecca Goett The role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practice Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open emergency medicine ethics ethical dilemmas ethics committee ethics consultation ethics policy hospital policy |
author_facet |
Eileen F. Baker Joel M. Geiderman Chadd K. Kraus Rebecca Goett |
author_sort |
Eileen F. Baker |
title |
The role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practice |
title_short |
The role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practice |
title_full |
The role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practice |
title_fullStr |
The role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practice |
title_full_unstemmed |
The role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practice |
title_sort |
role of hospital ethics committees in emergency medicine practice |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open |
issn |
2688-1152 |
publishDate |
2020-08-01 |
description |
Abstract Emergency physicians face real‐time ethical dilemmas that may occur at any hour of the day or night. Hospital ethics committees and ethics consultation services are not always able to provide immediate responses to emergency physicians’ consultation requests. When faced with an emergent dilemma, emergency physicians sometimes rely on risk management or hospital counsel to answer legal questions, but may be better served by real‐time ethics consultation. When other resources are not immediately available, emergency physicians should feel confident in making timely decisions, guided by basic principles of medical ethics. We make the following recommendations: (1) availability of a member of the hospital ethics committee to provide in‐person or telephonic consultation concurrent with patient care; (2) appointment to the hospital ethics committee of an emergency physician who is familiar with bioethical principles and is available for consultation when other ethics consultants are not; and (3) development of educational tools by professional societies or similar organizations to assist emergency physicians in making reasoned and defensible clinical ethics decisions. |
topic |
emergency medicine ethics ethical dilemmas ethics committee ethics consultation ethics policy hospital policy |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.12136 |
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