Ethical dilemmas with resource constraints in aged care - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 20
About This Presentation
Title:

Ethical dilemmas with resource constraints in aged care

Description:

Healthcare is unsuited to the free ... Utilitarianism. The liberal-welfarist philosophy ... Utilitarianism is seriously flawed. Utilitarianism: a brief critique ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:44
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 21
Provided by: SCBI
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Ethical dilemmas with resource constraints in aged care


1
Ethical dilemmas with resource constraints in
aged care
  • Dr John I Fleming
  • Director, Southern Cross Bioethics Institute

2
Must we ration in healthcare?
  • Healthcare is unsuited to the free market.
  • Healthcare is about the flourishing and
    well-being of people.
  • Healthcare has a voracious appetite for funding.
  • There are many other worthy social pursuits to
    fund.
  • Therefore rationing in healthcare is unavoidable.

3
We need an ethical framework for rationing
  • Rationing implies systematic decisionmaking.
  • Rationing decisions should be transparent and
    morally justified.
  • Which approaches to rationing are unacceptable,
    and why?
  • What is a morally appropriate system of rationing?

4
Ageist rationing
  • The clinical argument
  • (capacity to benefit)
  • The philosophical argument
  • (a fair innings)

5
Objections to ageist rationing
  • Age is a poor surrogate for prognosis
  • Aggravated ageing
  • A typical or reasonable lifespan?
  • Who judges quality of life?
  • The eugenic impulse

6
Objections to ageist rationing
  • Spending on the elderly is not disproportionate
  • Social contributions over a lifetime
  • The fundamental objection It breaches the
    principles of non-discrimination, equal access to
    the satisfaction of needs, social solidarity and
    respect for the elderly.

7
Healthworkers should not be gatekeepers.
  • Their concern must be for the individual patient.
  • They lack the information to make rationing
    decisions.
  • Their involvement in rationing may cause a breach
    of trust.
  • Instead, they should do all that is truly
    possible, both practically and morally.

8
Inappropriate philosophies for rationing
  • Liberal-welfarism
  • Utilitarianism

9
The liberal-welfarist philosophy
  • Committed to liberty, equality and fraternity,
    but also neutrality about the human good.
  • Liberty/autonomy
  • Equality of opportunity
  • Fraternity
  • Many questions remain unanswered, leaving an
    inadequate basis for healthcare allocation.

10
The utilitarian philosophy
  • A calculation of costs and benefits
  • QALYs are the most common application
  • QALYs are systematically biased against the
    elderly
  • Utilitarianism is seriously flawed

11
Utilitarianism a brief critique
  • People are not reducible to numbers
  • Comparing the incommensurable
  • Human rights are ignored
  • What is cost and what is benefit?
  • It requires moral luck
  • No justice or charity

12
Inappropriate principles for rationing
  • Neutral principles
  • Majority principles
  • Arbitrary principles

13
Neutral principles
  • For a liberal, pluralistic society?
  • Avoid choosing one conception of the good
  • Assumes the separation of public and private
    life
  • Ultimately precludes state involvement in
    healthcare
  • Favours the status quo

14
Majority principles
  • Opinion polls
  • Confirm majority prejudices
  • Methodological flaws
  • Marginalises the vulnerable and inarticulate
    minority
  • We always need to critique the views of the
    majority
  • We need responsible leadership

15
Arbitrary principles
  • Rules or standards with no coherent basis.
  • Principlism autonomy, beneficence,
    nonmaleficence, justice.
  • Principles must be balanced and compromised.
  • Ultimately autonomy trumps all.
  • Social justice is an also-ran.

16
What are appropriate principles for rationing?
  • What is healthcare about?
  • What are our basic values?
  • A conception of the human good
  • Justice
  • Human needs

17
Justice
  • Part of morality
  • Right relations between people
  • Commonality of life and interests
  • The common good
  • Giving to others their due
  • Distributive justice

18
A conception of the human good
  • We desire life and health
  • The ultimate goals behind our choices
  • Fundamental to rational deliberation
  • We do not choose what they will be
  • They are given in our very nature

19
Life and health
  • Human personal existence is a bodily existence.
  • Life and health are sought for their own sake.
  • They are intrinsically valuable.
  • But they are not the only goods.
  • What is integral to our flourishing gives rise to
    our basic needs.

20
Human needs
  • Not all healthcare meets genuine needs.
  • Healthcare needs do not create absolute duties.
  • Not all ways of satisfying needs are morally
    warranted.
  • We must seek what we need, but only in morally
    reasonable ways
  • Not all needs are equal.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com