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Health Care Ethics PDF

332 Pages·2006·1.34 MB·English
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H C E EALTH ARE THICS FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 1 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM H C E EALTH ARE THICS A C T A ATHOLIC HEOLOGICAL NALYSIS F E IFTH DITION Benedict M. Ashley, O.P. Jean K. deBlois, C.S.J. Kevin D. O’Rourke, O.P. Georgetown University Press Washington, D.C. FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 3 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM As of January 1, 2007, 13-digit ISBN numbers will replace the current 10-digit system. Paperback: 978-1-58901-116-8 Georgetown University Press, Washington, D.C. © 2006 by Georgetown University Press. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. Nihil Obstat Reverend Patrick J. Boyle, S.J., Ph.D. Censor Deputatus November 16, 2005 Imprimatur Reverend George J. Rassas Vicar General Archdiocese of Chicago November 23, 2005 The Nihil Obstat and the Imprimatur are official declarations that a book is free of doctrinal and moral error. No implication is contained that those who have granted the Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur agree with the content, opinions, or statements expressed. Nor do they assume any legal responsibility associated with publication. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Ashley, Benedict M. Health care ethics : a Catholic theological analysis / Benedict M. Ashley, Jean K. deBlois, Kevin D. O’Rourke. — 5th ed. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-1-58901-116-8 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 1-58901-116-3 (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Medical ethics—Religious aspects—Catholic Church. 2. Medicine—Religious aspects— Catholic Church. I. DeBlois, Jean. II. O’Rourke, Kevin D. III. Title. [DNLM: 1. Ethics, Medical. 2. Delivery of Health Care—ethics. 3. Catholicism. 4. Bioethical Issues. 5. Religion and Medicine. W 50 A817h 2006] R724.A74 2006 174.2—dc22 2006003222 This book is printed on acid-free paper meeting the requirements of the American National Standard for Permanence in Paper for Printed Library Materials. 13 12 11 10 09 08 07 06 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 First printing Printed in the United States of America FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 4 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM C ONTENTS Introduction ix List of Abbreviations Used in the Text and in Citations xv Part I: Health Care Ethics and Human Needs 1 Bioethics in a Multicultural Age 3 Overview 3 1.1 The Emergence of Secular Bioethics 3 1.2 The Foundations of the Ethics of Health Care 5 1.3 Current Methodologies in Bioethics 9 1.4 Faith and Reason in Health Care Ethics 19 1.5 Conclusion 30 2 Ethics and Needs of the Common Person 31 Overview 31 2.1 An Ethics Based on Innate Human Needs 31 2.2 Jesus Christ, Healer, as Ethical Model 40 2.3 Character and the Major Moral Virtues 42 2.4 Prudent Decision Making 50 2.5 Moral Norms Especially Relevant to Health Care 53 2.6 Conclusion 60 v FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 5 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM vi Contents Part II: Clinical Issues 3 Sexuality and Reproduction 63 Overview 63 3.1 The Meaning of Human Sexuality 63 3.2 When Does Human Life Begin? 69 3.3 Ethical Issues in Reproduction 73 3.4 Pastoral Approach to Ethical Problems Arising from Sexuality 88 3.5 Conclusion 89 4 Reconstructing and Modifying the Human Body: Ethical Perspectives 91 Overview 91 4.1 Modifying the Human Body 91 4.2 Genetic Intervention 94 4.3 Genetic Screening and Counseling 98 4.4 Organ Transplantation 103 4.5 Reconstructive and Cosmetic Surgery 108 4.6 Experimentation and Research on Human Subjects 113 4.7 Conclusion 122 5 Mental Health: Ethical Perspectives 125 Overview 125 5.1 What Is Mental Health? 126 5.2 Medical/Surgical Therapies 130 5.3 Psychotherapies 136 5.4 The Christian Model of Mental Health 145 5.5 Ethical Problems in Mental Therapy 148 5.6 Conclusion 160 6 Suffering and Death: A Theological Perspective 163 Overview 163 6.1 Mystery of Death 163 6.2 Fear of Death 166 6.3 Defining Death 169 6.4 Truth Telling to the Dying 173 6.5 Care for the Corpse or Cadaver 175 6.6 Suicide, Assisted Suicide, and Euthanasia 178 6.7 Allowing to Die: Withholding or Withdrawing Life Support 182 6.8 Care of Permanently Unconscious Patients 194 6.9 Treatment of Pain 197 6.10 Conclusion 198 FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 6 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM Contents vii Part III: Social and Pastoral Responsibilities 7 Social Responsibility 203 Overview 203 7.1 Professions: Depersonalizing Trends 204 7.2 Characteristics of Medicine as a Profession 206 7.3 Health Care Counseling 210 7.4 Professional Communication and Confidentiality 212 7.5 The Political Situation of Health Care Today 215 7.6 Principles of Health Care Policy 218 7.7 Health Care Ethics and Public Policy 225 7.8 Responsibilities of Catholic Health Care Facilities 227 7.9 Conclusion 233 8 Pastoral Care 235 Overview 235 8.1 The Goals of Pastoral Ministry 235 8.2 Pastoral Care of the Health Care Staff 239 8.3 Pastoral Care and Ethical Counseling 241 8.4 Spiritual Counseling in Health Care 244 8.5 Celebrating the Healing Process 249 8.6 Conclusion 255 Glossary 257 References 265 Index 305 FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 7 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM I NTRODUCTION PURPOSE OF THE BOOK IN THE MID-1970s, BENEDICT ASHLEY, O.P., a fellow of the Institute of Religion at the Texas Medical Center, Houston, Texas, and Kevin O’Rourke, O.P., vice president for Medical Ethics at the Catholic Hospital Association, St. Louis, Missouri—both former presidents of the Aquinas Institute of Theology then located in Dubuque, Iowa—sought to produce a volume that would explain The Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Facilities of the United States Catholic Bishops Conference (ERD). We had a twofold purpose: (1) to present a study that would consider the basic principles under- lying the Catholic understanding of health care ethics and (2) to assist Christian, and es- pecially Catholic, health care professionals and health care facilities in their task of offering service and witness in the Christian tradition, in a milieu influenced by diverse and con- flicting value systems. Thus we sought to consider the nature of the human person seek- ing to fulfill human needs under the influence of grace, explain the principles of Catholic theology that are pertinent to the practice of health care, and present individual clinical issues in health care from this perspective. As we present this fifth edition of Health Care Ethics, our purpose remains the same as it was when we prepared the first edition. We proceed from the theological perspective of the Catholic Church, and this theological perspective is founded upon sacred scripture but also depends upon human reason, usually referred to as natural law. Hence, as indicated in chapters 1 and 2, we believe that the Catholic theological perspective has much to con- tribute to the discussion of bioethics in the twenty-first century. We welcome a third author to this edition, Sister Jean deBlois, C.S.J. Jean was a registered nurse before pursuing studies in moral theology and ethics. She received a Ph.D. in moral ix FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 9 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM x Introduction theology from the Catholic University of America in 1987, and she was a faculty member of the Center for Health Care Ethics at Saint Louis University Health Sciences Center for a number of years before going to the Catholic Health Association. There she served as ethicist and vice president for mission and sponsorship for a number of years. Currently Jean is on the faculty of Aquinas Institute of Theology in St. Louis, Missouri, where she is associate professor of moral theology and director of the Master of Arts in Health Care Mission program. She is also sponsor liaison to Ascension Health for the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondolet. In that capacity, she serves on the board of trustees of Ascension Health. NEW EDITION The fourth edition of Health Care Ethics: A Theological Analysis was published almost ten years ago. Since that time there have been many new clinical innovations and theoretical issues that have arisen in the field of health care, which necessitate another edition of our work. To name just a few of the recent developments in medicine, we consider in this most recent edition of this book the completion of the Human Genome Project and its poten- tial for radically changing the practice of medicine, recent efforts at controlling sexual se- lection of infants, efforts at genetic modification of the human genotype and phenotype, cloning, development of palliative care as a medical specialty, the acceptance of persons without beating hearts as organ donors, the retrieval and cultivation of embryo and adult stem cells as a source of therapy, development of reconstructive and cosmetic surgery, the use of pharmacology to treat mental illness and awareness, and the weakening of man- aged care as a method of controlling costs of medical care. In addition to these develop- ments in clinical practice, the role of the federal government in regard to funding health care has increased and technology has proliferated, as has the influence of health manage- ment organizations of one kind or another. Because these changes in the health care envi- ronment tend to weaken the bonds of the patient-physician relationship, we once again devote attention to personalizing the health care profession. After the many encyclicals of Pope John Paul II in the early 1990s, such as The Gospel of Life, The Splendor of Truth, and Faith and Reason, which have relevance for the study of health care ethics, and since the publication of the last edition, the Church did not offer any new encyclicals influencing the ethics of health care. However, there were two signifi- cant allocutions issued by Pope John Paul II that merit our attention: one concerning the care of patients in a persistent vegetative state, and the second considering palliative care for dying patients. In addition, the Catholic Bishops of the United States revised a few norms of the ERD. The complete text of these important directives is found on the U.S. Catholic Bishops website (see ERD 2001). GENERAL OUTLINE In the course of twenty-five years and five editions of this work, this is the most thorough revision that we have undertaken. We have long maintained that health care ethics is “everybody’s business.” It is not an esoteric topic reserved for a few. Realizing that many people with a general interest in health care ethics, as well as health care professionals, have FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 10 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM Introduction xi used our book for reference and education, we have sought to make it more “user-friendly.” With this in mind, we have limited some of the theoretical considerations and engaged as soon as possible in the main discussion clinical issues that are of interest to our readers. We have retained, however, considerations of the various methods of engaging in the study of bioethics and the ethical responsibilities of social organizations such as the federal govern- ment and the Church. We believe that each person bears primary responsibility for personal health and the right to retain ultimate control over his or her health. We also believe that each person has the right to help from the community in achieving personal health, as well as the reciprocal obligation to assist other members of the community in the same search. Fulfilling these personal and social responsibilities is a value-centered, ethical endeavor. For this reason, in part I, we devote attention to the various methods of ethical discourse utilized in the United States today, explaining why these methods do not fulfill our purpose, and present the method of ethical decision making utilized in Catholic tradition, with Jesus Christ as the model for human well-being. One of the unique features of our study is the question “What does it mean to be hu- man?” In answer to this question, we consider the needs of the human person and the quest to fulfill these needs. In this consideration of what it means to be human, we consider per- sons as individuals—but also as members of a community—an essential factor of human identity and fulfillment. We conclude this section with a consideration of the virtues that are needed to develop a habit of Christian ethical decision making. Next, in part II, we consider the more common ethical questions and dilemmas oc- curring in clinical care. When considering these questions we offer, first of all, arguments from human reason, sometimes called the natural law. We confirm natural law reason- ing with the teachings of the magisterium of the Catholic Church, whether contained in papal statements or in the ERD promulgated by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB, 2001). Because the teaching of the Church often is open to various interpretations, we seek to present the various responses that have been offered by different voices from within the Catholic community. For example, the Directives concerning Extra Uterine Pregnancy (D. 48) and Treatment of Rape Victims (D. 36) prohibit any therapy that would be a direct abortion. But which method of therapy in these clinical situations is truly a direct abortion is open to discussion. Hence we seek to provide options that will further this discussion. When discussing clinical issues, and in other places throughout the text, we often refer to physicians, but we really wish to include in that word all other medical personnel engaged in serving others in their quest for health. If sometimes we seem to devote more attention to physicians than to other members of the health care team, it is only because they are more visible and their re- sponsibilities are more clearly defined by professional standards. However, what is predi- cated for physicians should be applied to other health care professionals as well. Having considered the various particular ethical issues that arise in the study of health care ethics in part III, we conclude our study by presenting the major social concerns and investigating the nature and responsibility of health care professionals involved in pastoral care. Social concerns are the responsibility of the health care profession, the federal gov- ernment, and the health care facilities sponsored by juridical persons within the Church. Because of our conviction that social concerns are an important part of our study, we have chosen the term health care ethics rather than bioethics to designate the matter under study FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 11 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM xii Introduction due to the former’s wider connotation. Pastoral care concludes our study because it is an integral element of health care ethics, insofar as it focuses on spiritual development, which in a certain sense is the goal of all human activity. DIVERSE VALUE SYSTEMS Too often, bioethical controversies are confusing and frustrating because participants do not define their value system or have little idea of the ethical system they are using and its theoretical implications. Many today assume that there is an accepted neutral system of bioethical decision making. Many also assume that any discussion of issues in bioethics will be made in light of this neutral and often value-free system. We take a different view and believe that the Roman Catholic system of moral decision making has much to offer a public discussion of these issues. To give a privileged position to a humanistic perspec- tive from the outset only frustrates honest debate and prevents cooperation in our plural- istic society. Now, the humanistic or value-neutral method of decision making is considered self-evident in our society. The President’s Commission on Bioethics (PCB) shows some signs of mitigating this presumption by openly considering values presented by different religious communities. Catholics reason ethically in terms of a value system rooted in a view of reality con- tained in the Christian Gospel interpreted by the Church in its life of faith and authorita- tively formulated by the Pope and the bishops. Catholics believe in this teaching founded upon the Gospels with a commitment of faith, and they accept its ordinary formulation and application by the Pope and bishops with “religious assent,” even when these state- ments lack the authority of a final definition. This commitment to authoritative teaching, as well as respect for a long tradition of theological reflection, however, cannot exempt educated Catholics from listening honestly to other systems of belief nor from comparing their beliefs with the findings of science and history and with the personal experience of life (Vatican Council II 1965). For Catholics, therefore, faith and reason are complimen- tary, not contradictory sources of truth and value (John Paul II 1998b). Because our ethical discussion of concrete issues is presented within the Catholic value system, we have subtitled this book A Catholic Theological Analysis. We define analysis as an effort to solve concrete ethical problems in terms of principles rooted in sacred scrip- ture and tested by the experience of individuals and communities motivated by and rooted in faith. We hope that in doing so we are in line with intellectual independence, combined with respect for authority and tradition that, to us, is one of the chief characteristics of a Catholic and Christian ethical system. GRATITUDE As in the past, we have been aided in the production of this work by many different medical, nursing, and hospital administrative personnel and ethicists too numerous to mention. We thank them for their willingness to read and critique sections of our book that pertain to their specialties. We also offer our grateful thanks to Mark Kuczewski, Ph.D., director of the Neiswanger Institute for Bioethics and Health Policy at the Stritch School FM_pg_i-xviii.pmd 12 10/31/2006, 9:57 AM

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nurse before pursuing studies in moral theology and ethics. (probabiliorism), as the purpose of law is to guide us in choosing the best 1997), Indian, and Chinese health care ethics and those of indigenous .. ranked hierarchically, as Aristotle and Aquinas did, by their subordination to the suprem
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