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Truth-Telling and Confidentiality

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Bioethics, Chapter 4 Truthfulness can be specified by two hypothetical commands: If you communicate, do not lie (refusing to communicate is not lying) You must ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Truth-Telling and Confidentiality


1
Truth-Telling and Confidentiality
  • Bioethics, Chapter 4 (105-110) and Garrett
    Supplement (111-130)

2
Truthfulness
  • Truthfulness can be specified by two hypothetical
    commands
  • If you communicate, do not lie (refusing to
    communicate is not lying)
  • You morally must communicate, if others have a
    right to communication (not everyone has a right
    to know what you know, or all you know)
  • (Vaughn doesnt try to define truthfulness these
    specifications are from Garrett, p112)

3
Truthfulness
  • What is lying?
  • Garrett cites a traditional understanding of
    lying, calling it speech against the mind
    something at odds with what the speaker believes
    to be true p112
  • That definition is rejected, though, as it leads
    us to classify assertions in play acting, humor,
    games, etc., as lies, which seems wrong.
  • Instead, well call those speech acts against the
    mind, falsehoods.

4
Lying (cont.)
  • Lies will then be
  • falsehoods uttered in circumstances where others
    have a reasonable expectation of the truth
  • Why not where others have a right to the truth?
  • A lie surely does occur when we utter falsehoods
    to those with a right to the truth, right?
  • Consider Is your car in the parking lot?

5
Reasonable Expectation
  • Garrett provides 3 ways to assess reasonable
    expectation
  • The place of communication (in public, in a
    church, synagogue, or mosque, at a funeral, etc.)
  • The roles of the communicators (teacher/student,
    boss/employee, etc.)
  • The nature of the truth involved (personal
    matters sex, finances, secret ambitions, etc.)
  • All 3 are connected with the obligation of
    confidentiality and the right of privacy

6
Reasonable Expectation
  • Special contexts that affect reasonable
    expectation
  • business
  • advertising
  • law (self-incrimination)
  • volunteering information
  • being asked

7
Right to the Truth
  • In medical contexts we have a right to the truth
    from others, or conversely, an obligation to
    provide it to them, regarding the
  • information in informed consent
  • information paid for by patients
  • information needed for important nonmedical
    decisions

8
Right to the Truth
  • Like what important nonmedical decisions?
  • Like the right of patients to know that they are
    dying, which is important for settling
  • financial affairs
  • personal affairs
  • making peace with God
  • settling disputes with family, friends, enemies
  • simply saying goodbye

9
Right to the Truth
  • The Placebo Problem
  • Placebos involve medical deception. Can they ever
    be used outside of research?
  • (if you consent to participate in a research
    study knowing you may not be treated with active
    pharmacological agents, the deception is trivial)

10
Right to the Truth
  • Garrett discusses all the ways placebos can be
    used to good effect. Then says this
  • If the physician says I am going to prescribe
    something that often helps in these cases and has
    no bad side effects,
  • it is hard to see how he is deceiving the
    patient.
  • Certainly he is not lying.
  • In such a presentation, the patient knows what
    she or he needs to know in order to give informed
    consent.
  • No untruth is spoken, and
  • no information to which the patient has a right
    is suppressed
  • Does this sound right to you?! (note my italics)
  • What holiday would this need to fall on?

11
Confidentiality
  • Vaughn discusses consequentialist and
    non-consequentialist justifications for valuing
    confidentiality.
  • Consequentialist reasons confidentiality is
    necessary to protect
  • Physician/patient trust
  • Patients access to insurance
  • Patients relationships (familial and other)
  • Patients public stature

12
Confidentiality
  • Non-consequentialist reasons
  • You have a simple right to privacy based on the
    good of self-determination and
    self-determination is limited when you cannot
    control the distribution of personal information.
  • Also, if a physician has promised (perhaps
    implicitly) not to divulge information about you,
    the promise is ethically binding.

13
Confidentiality
  • Confidentiality is concerned with keeping
    secrets. Garrett -p117
  • A secret is knowledge that a person has a right
    or obligation to conceal. Garrett again, p117
  • -note that that isnt true. A secret is simply
    knowledge intentionally concealed
  • There are
  • Natural secrets
  • Promised secrets
  • Professional secrets

14
Confidentiality
  • Natural secrets
  • Secrets whose revelation would cause harm by
    nature
  • Letting others know what you know about someones
  • binger
  • social disease
  • Infidelity
  • foot odor problem
  • bad grade

15
Confidentiality
  • Promised secrets
  • knowledge we have promised to conceal. -p118
  • The special evil of revealing promised secrets
    arises from the harmful effects of breaking
    promises. p118
  • -note that that is false for Kantians,
    deontologists generally (again with consequences
    sheesh!)

16
Confidentiality
  • Professional secrets
  • knowledge that, if revealed, will harm not only
    the professionals client, but will do serious
    harm to the profession and to the society that
    depends on the profession for important
    services.

17
Confidentiality
  • Professional secrets (cont.)
  • Exceptions
  • Medical consultation (to figure out how to treat)
  • State law (gun and knife wounds need reporting)
  • Court decisions (similar logic to law, different
    standard)
  • Unusual relationships (if doctors role is to
    determine health status for company, army, etc.)
  • Proportionality (good of revelation outweighs bad
    of divulging a confidence)

18
Confidentiality
  • Professional secrets (cont.)
  • Exceptions (cont.)
  • Family (law has changed to exclude immediate
    family from doctor-patient confidence family is
    not considered the patient as it once was)
  • Children and adolescents (teen pregnancy, social
    disease, drug use, etc. states forbid to varying
    extents physicians sharing such information with
    parents)
  • Media publicity for celebrities and politicians
  • Third party payers (insurance companies need to
    know medical information)
  • Public good (AIDS and HIV information)
  • HIV-positive provider (must disclose information
    to patient?)

19
Confidentiality
  • Read about the Tarasoff case and A Duty to Warn
    in Vaughn, p. 109.
  • Read Applying Major Theories on p. 110.

20
References
  • Vaughn, L. (2010). Bioethics
  • Garrett, T. M., Baillie, H. W., Garrett, R. M.
    (2001). Health Care Ethics (4th Edition)
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