How clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and research

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Physicians, nurses, and other clinicians readily acknowledge being troubled by encounters with patients who trigger moral judgments. For decades social scientists have noted that moral judgment of patients is pervasive, occurring not only in egregious and crimina...

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Main Author: Hill Terry E
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2010-07-01
Series:Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine
Online Access:http://www.peh-med.com/content/5/1/11
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spelling doaj-85ac83be799e42afa8aa87b5372ba7832020-11-24T22:59:56ZengBMCPhilosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine1747-53412010-07-01511110.1186/1747-5341-5-11How clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and researchHill Terry E<p>Abstract</p> <p>Physicians, nurses, and other clinicians readily acknowledge being troubled by encounters with patients who trigger moral judgments. For decades social scientists have noted that moral judgment of patients is pervasive, occurring not only in egregious and criminal cases but also in everyday situations in which appraisals of patients' social worth and culpability are routine. There is scant literature, however, on the actual prevalence and dynamics of moral judgment in healthcare. The indirect evidence available suggests that moral appraisals function via a complex calculus that reflects variation in patient characteristics, clinician characteristics, task, and organizational factors. The full impact of moral judgment on healthcare relationships, patient outcomes, and clinicians' own well-being is yet unknown. The paucity of attention to moral judgment, despite its significance for patient-centered care, communication, empathy, professionalism, healthcare education, stereotyping, and outcome disparities, represents a blind spot that merits explanation and repair. New methodologies in social psychology and neuroscience have yielded models for how moral judgment operates in healthcare and how research in this area should proceed. Clinicians, educators, and researchers would do well to recognize both the legitimate and illegitimate moral appraisals that are apt to occur in healthcare settings.</p> http://www.peh-med.com/content/5/1/11
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hill Terry E
spellingShingle Hill Terry E
How clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and research
Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine
author_facet Hill Terry E
author_sort Hill Terry E
title How clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and research
title_short How clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and research
title_full How clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and research
title_fullStr How clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and research
title_full_unstemmed How clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and research
title_sort how clinicians make (or avoid) moral judgments of patients: implications of the evidence for relationships and research
publisher BMC
series Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine
issn 1747-5341
publishDate 2010-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Physicians, nurses, and other clinicians readily acknowledge being troubled by encounters with patients who trigger moral judgments. For decades social scientists have noted that moral judgment of patients is pervasive, occurring not only in egregious and criminal cases but also in everyday situations in which appraisals of patients' social worth and culpability are routine. There is scant literature, however, on the actual prevalence and dynamics of moral judgment in healthcare. The indirect evidence available suggests that moral appraisals function via a complex calculus that reflects variation in patient characteristics, clinician characteristics, task, and organizational factors. The full impact of moral judgment on healthcare relationships, patient outcomes, and clinicians' own well-being is yet unknown. The paucity of attention to moral judgment, despite its significance for patient-centered care, communication, empathy, professionalism, healthcare education, stereotyping, and outcome disparities, represents a blind spot that merits explanation and repair. New methodologies in social psychology and neuroscience have yielded models for how moral judgment operates in healthcare and how research in this area should proceed. Clinicians, educators, and researchers would do well to recognize both the legitimate and illegitimate moral appraisals that are apt to occur in healthcare settings.</p>
url http://www.peh-med.com/content/5/1/11
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