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Systems of service: reflections on the moral foundations of improvement

机译:服务体系:关于改进的道德基础的思考

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摘要

Providing clinical care is above all a service; in that sense, the medical profession aspires to Aristotelian phronesis, or prudence—being ‘capable of action with regard to things that are good and bad for man.’ This intense commitment to service encourages healthcare providers to gravitate towards one or another epistemology as their preferred moral pathway to better care. One such epistemology, the ‘snail’ perspective, places particular value on knowing whether newly devised clinical interventions are both effective and safe before applying them, mainly through rigorous experimental (deductive) studies, which contribute to the body of established scientific knowledge (episteme). Another (the ‘evangelist’ perspective) places particular value on the experiential learning gained from applying new clinical interventions, which contributes to professional know-how (techne). From the ‘snail’ point of view, implementing clinical interventions before their efficacy and safety are rigorously established is morally suspect because it can result in ineffective, wasteful and potentially harmful actions. Conversely, from the ‘evangelist’ point of view, demanding ‘hard’ proof of efficacy and safety before implementing every intervention is morally suspect because it can delay and obstruct the on-the-ground learning seen as being urgently needed to fix ineffective, inefficient and sometimes dangerous existing clinical practices. Two different moral syndromes—sets of interlocked values—underlie these perspectives; both are arguably essential for better care. Although it is not clear how best to leverage their combined strengths, a true symbiotic relationship between the two appears to be developing, one that leaves the two syndromes intact but softens their epistemological edges and supports active, close, respectful interaction between them.
机译:提供临床护理首先是一项服务;从这个意义上讲,医学界渴望“亚里士多德式的通病”或“审慎的态度”,即“能够对人类的好事采取行动”。这种对服务的强烈承诺鼓励医疗保健提供者倾向于一种或另一种认识论作为他们的认识论。首选的道德途径以获得更好的护理。一种这样的认识论,即“蜗牛”的观点,特别是在运用新的临床干预措施之前,尤其是通过严格的实验(演绎)研究来了解新设计的临床干预措施是否既有效又安全,这些研究有助于形成已确立的科学知识(认知度) 。另一个(“传播者”的观点)特别重视通过应用新的临床干预获得的经验学习,这有助于专业知识(技术)的发展。从“蜗牛”的角度来看,道德上怀疑在严格确定其功效和安全性之前实施临床干预措施是因为它可能导致无效,浪费和潜在的有害行为。相反,从“传播者”的角度来看,在实施每项干预措施之前要求对有效性和安全性进行“硬性”证明在道德上是可疑的,因为这可能会延迟和阻碍实地学习,而这些实地学习被视为解决无效,低效的迫切需要。有时甚至是危险的现有临床实践。这些观点是两种不同的道德综合症-相互关联的价值观的集合。两者对于更好的护理都是必不可少的。尽管尚不清楚如何最好地利用它们的综合优势,但似乎正在发展两者之间真正的共生关系,这种关系可以使两种综合症保持完整,但可以软化其认识论的边缘,并支持它们之间积极,密切,相互尊重的互动。

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