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Ethical dilemmas in psychiatry

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Ethical dilemmas in psychiatry. Prof. Guy Widdershoven. Department of Health, Ethics and Society ... She becomes manic and later depressed ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ethical dilemmas in psychiatry


1
Ethical dilemmas in psychiatry
  • Prof. Guy Widdershoven
  • Department of Health, Ethics and Society

2
Outline
  • The story of a patient
  • Coercion and interference, the current situation
  • Autonomy
  • Care ethics
  • A deliberative approach to coercion and
    interference

3
The story of a patient
  • Kay Redfield Jamison studies psychology, and
    starts working in psychiatry

4
The story of a patient
  • She becomes manic and later depressed
  • She takes medication (lithium), which is
    effective but leads to lack of emotions and loss
    of motivation to work
  • She wants to stop tretament, but her psychiatrist
    forces her to continue
  • With support of her psychiatrist, she experiments
    with the dose, and becomes more herself
  • I was more sensitive to beauty, but also to
    sadness

5
Coercion and interference, the current situation
  • Under which conditions is coercion in psychiatry
    allowed in The Netherlands
  • .....
  • Which types of coercion exist in psychiatry
  • .....
  • Which type of coercion is regarded as most invase
    in NL 1, 2, 3
  • What is the legal status of interference
  • ....

6
Coercion and interference, the current situation
  • Strict legal rules coercion as last resort
  • Only in case of danger to self or others
  • (In)competence does not play a role
  • Three types seclusion, fixation, medication
  • In The Netherlands, seclusion is regarded as less
    invasive compared to forced medication
  • Interference is less invasive than coercion, but
    also problematic

7
Jamison
  • Involuntarily admitted to the hospital
  • Enforced medication
  • Danger to self (and others)
  • Psychiatrist does not allow stopping of
    medication
  • He keeps interfering (allowing reduction of
    medication under strict conditions)
  • Interference is valued positively by Jamison

8
Autonomy
  • Negative freedom
  • Right to be left alone
  • Competence as limiting condition (not in
    psychiatry)
  • Positive freedom
  • Ability to develop ones life
  • Competence as crucial aspect and goal

9
Jamison
  • Negative freedom
  • Involuntary admission and treatment because of
    danger
  • Positive freedom
  • Reducing the dose in order to work
  • Self-understanding (including sadness)

10
Care ethics (J. Tronto)
  • Care is an activity of the species which
    includes everything we do in order to maintain
    our world, to continue and repair it, in order
    to live in it as well as possible

11
Phases of care
  • Caring about (attentiveness)
  • Taking care of (responsibility)
  • Care giving (competence)
  • Care receiving (responsiveness)

12
Jamison
  • Attention when things go wrong (or too well)
  • Psychiatrist remains firm about medication,
    arranges possibility of experiment
  • Psychiatrist keeps her under supervision
  • Life has more quality after change of the dose

13
A deliberative approach to coercion in psychiatry
  • Focus on autonomy as self-development
  • (Fostering) competence
  • Deliberation about options for care
  • Care as a process, attention for prevention and
    evaluation
  • Coercion as the extreme of a spectrum of
    interference

14
Conclusion
  • Autonomy negative freedom dominant in
    psychiatric law, positive freedom needs more
    attention competence should be central
  • Care ethics interference is positive, but should
    be evaluated as part of a process of care,
  • A deliberative approach deliberation is needed
    about the goal of coercion (self-development,
    working life), as well as the means (seclusion vs
    medication)
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