Categories
MY THERAPY JOURNEY

The relevance of ethical dilemmas to the teaching of psychotherapy

Medical courses generally dedicate a significant amount of time to teaching about ethical dilemmas. The reasons for this are usually covered by these labels:

  1. Patient Care and Safety: Healthcare professionals make decisions that directly impact patients’ well-being and safety. Ethical dilemmas in medicine often involve complex situations where choices must be made that balance the best interests of the patient, informed consent, and potential risks. Teaching ethics helps medical professionals develop the skills to navigate these situations while prioritizing patient care.
  2. Informed Decision-Making: Medical decisions are rarely black and white. Ethical dilemmas frequently arise when multiple valid options exist, and the best choice depends on the specific context. Training in medical ethics helps practitioners consider various perspectives, weigh pros and cons, and make informed decisions that align with their patients’ values and best interests.
  3. Autonomy, Agency, and Consent: Respecting patient autonomy is a fundamental principle in healthcare. Ethical training helps healthcare professionals understand the importance of obtaining informed consent, involving patients in decisions about their care, and respecting their preferences, even in challenging situations. There’s strong evidence that having a sense of personal ‘agency’ (aka control) leads patients to pursue treatment to its natural conclusion rather than stopping when immediate symptoms disappear.
  4. Complex Cases: Modern medicine often involves intricate cases that pose moral and ethical challenges. These might include end-of-life decisions, organ transplantation, genetic testing, experimental treatments, and more. Properly addressing these cases requires a deep understanding of ethical principles and frameworks. Psychotherapy too embraces decisions that will affect an individual for the rest of their life.
  5. Legal and Regulatory Compliance: Many ethical principles are intertwined with legal and regulatory requirements in healthcare. Teaching about ethical dilemmas helps medical professionals understand the legal implications of their actions and avoid potential legal pitfalls.
  6. Interprofessional Collaboration: Ethical dilemmas often require collaboration among healthcare professionals from various disciplines. Teaching medical ethics fosters the ability to communicate effectively, share perspectives, and reach consensus in complex situations.
  7. Professionalism: Medical ethics education is integral to shaping a strong sense of professionalism among healthcare providers. It instills values such as integrity, empathy, and honesty, which are vital for maintaining patient trust and a high standard of care. For disciplines like counselling which is on the threshold of professionalisation a focus on ethics affirms its status.
  8. Public Trust: Related to ‘professionalism’, the medical field relies heavily on public trust. Demonstrating a commitment to ethical practices helps uphold the reputation of healthcare professionals and institutions, fostering trust within the community.
  9. Ethical Changes in Medicine: As medical technology and practices evolve, new ethical challenges arise. Teaching medical ethics equips future healthcare professionals to adapt to these changes and make ethically sound decisions in rapidly changing environments.
  10. Reflective Practice: Ethical training encourages healthcare professionals to engage in self-reflection and critical thinking about their actions and decisions. This ongoing process helps them continuously improve their ethical decision-making skills.

Medical courses, therefore, invest considerable time in teaching about ethical dilemmas because ethical considerations are inherent to patient-centred care, informed decision-making, and maintaining the integrity of the profession. Ethical training equips healthcare professionals to navigate the complexities of their field while upholding the highest standards of patient care and professional conduct.

Aren’t ethical dilemmas really just common sense?

Ethical dilemmas are often resolved by a combination of rational thinking, moral principles, and practical judgment. Common sense can play a role in tackling ethical dilemmas, but it might not be the sole or primary factor. Whether common sense can effectively resolve an ethical dilemma depends on several factors:

  1. Clarity of Values: If the ethical dilemma involves choices that align with widely accepted values and moral principles, common sense might provide a straightforward resolution. For example, a dilemma involving honesty and truthfulness might be resolved through common sense if honesty is considered a fundamental value.
  2. Simplicity: When an ethical dilemma is relatively simple and doesn’t involve complex or conflicting principles, common sense might be sufficient to guide a decision. For instance, deciding whether to help someone in immediate danger is often resolved by an intuitive sense of empathy and compassion.
  3. Cultural and Societal Norms: Common sense is often influenced by cultural and societal norms. Ethical dilemmas that are consistent with prevailing norms may find resolution through common sense, as individuals draw on their understanding of what is socially acceptable.
  4. Personal Experience: Past experiences and personal values can contribute to a common-sense approach to ethical dilemmas. If someone has encountered a similar situation before, they might rely on their intuition to determine an appropriate course of action.
  5. Immediate Practicality: In some situations, common sense might prioritize immediate practicality and safety. For instance, if an ethical dilemma involves potential harm to oneself or others, common sense might lean towards minimizing harm as quickly as possible.
  6. Clear Hierarchy of Values: If the ethical dilemma involves conflicting values but there’s a clear hierarchy among them, common sense might guide individuals to prioritize the more important value.

However, there are instances where ethical dilemmas are more complex and involve conflicting principles, grey areas, and potential unintended consequences. In these cases, relying solely on common sense might not be enough. A deeper analysis of ethical theories, discussion with others (such as peers and supervisors), consultation with experts, and careful consideration of long-term consequences might be necessary to make an informed and ethically justifiable decision.

So, common sense can provide a useful starting point for resolving many ethical dilemmas, however, more complex situations often require a more comprehensive and nuanced approach that takes into account various moral considerations.

Categories
MY TEACHING JOURNEY MY THERAPY JOURNEY PURE BLOG

Synchronicity

It was Carl Jung who first coined the term, ‘synchronicity’ to describe meaningful coincidences in our lives.

Many years ago, I took a group of students to the Isle of Wight collecting specimens. As I reversed the university’s minibus on a forest trail miles from any road, it fell over a concrete lip so that one of the rear wheels was suspended over a deep ditch. We piled out and some of the students tried valiantly to prop it up. It was a hopeless task, and I began to contemplate a long hike to a telephone (this was pre-mobiles), knowing that the AA would not help as we were on private land. At that moment, over the brow of the hill came the Weston-Super-Mare Tug of War team on a ‘training camp’ for the weekend. Minutes later, they had lifted the minibus and put it back on the track. This is, to me, an example of synchronicity.

If you believe in a supernatural being, then they were surely looking over us that afternoon.

Not all coincidences have such a practical bent. Some are described by believers in a ‘universe’, as providing a nod in our direction when we are making significant changes in our lives. They represent, such folk say, a gentle endorsement (or the opposite) for our course of action.

This week, I am in transition. I left one job (on the 1st) and am about to start another (on the 4th). The one I am leaving was something I enjoyed enormously but I had become concerned that the organisation was not aligned to my personal values. I don’t know if the new one will be any better, but it felt right to move on.

Yesterday, the 3rd of May, would have been my mother’s 93rd birthday. She died 9 years ago, just a couple of months after I had started the job that I am now leaving. Her first name was Betty – not short for Elisabeth, which caused some trouble for her at school where they wanted her to conform to their own expectations of children’s names!

In the afternoon, we went for a walk along the towpath of the Oxford Canal which runs close to home. While there are some boats that moor up permanently or, at least, for prolonged periods, there are others that pass through stopping only for an evening before continuing their journey. One such boat, heading south tonight, had chosen an idyllic spot and the solo female navigator had popped her deckchair on a concrete platform overlooking the adjacent River Cherwell and was making a roll-up, chatting on her tablet, and enjoying the setting sun over the valley.

It’s hard to see on this photograph, but the boat’s name was… Betty.