Ethics consultation process

Author(s):  
Jeffrey Spike
1993 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 457-467 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bethany Spielman

A request that an ethics committee or consultant analyze the ethical issues in a case, delineate ethical options, or make a recommendation need not automatically but often does elicit legal information. In a recent book in which ethics consultants described cases on which they had worked, almost all cited a legal case or statute that had shaped the consultation process. During a period of just a few months, case consultation done under the auspices of one university hospital ethics committee involved interpretation of statutes on living wills, durable powers of attorney, competency, confidentiality, guardianship, AIDS testing, and disability (personal observation). At another hospital, 30% of ethics consultations were thought to involve legal issues. Attorneys at a third hospital estimated that virtually every case involves legal issues. The notion that ethics consultation is an “amalgam” of medicine, ethics, interpersonal skills, and law is gaining currency. Ethics consultation has become a channel through which law enters the clinical setting.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lynette Carol Cederquist ◽  
Jamie LaBuzetta ◽  
Edward Cachay ◽  
Lawrence Friedman ◽  
Cassia Yi ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Ethics consult services are well established, but often remain underutilized. Our aim was to identify the barriers and perceptions of the Ethics consult service at our urban academic medical center which might contribute to underutilization.Methods: This was a cross-sectional single-center, anonymous written online survey, developed by the UCSD Ethics committee, distributed by Survey Monkey, in January 2019, to a total of 3,800 clinicians at a tertiary care academic medical center. This was a quality improvement project, so IRB approval was waived. Results: Approximately 3,800 surveys were sent to physicians, advance practice providers (APPs) and nurses with a return rate of 5.5 - 10%. The majority of respondents had encountered an ethical dilemma although only half had ever requested an ethics consult. We found that there were 4 general reasons people did not consult Ethics: 1.) unawareness of the existence of or means of contacting the Ethics service. 2.) a priori perceptions that an Ethics consult would not be helpful or might slow down decision making. 3.) experiencing a poor quality consult in the past, including variability in knowledge and ability among various consultants, 4) a consult did not improve the situation, or lacked specific guidance from the consultant.Conclusions: Based on our survey results, we proposed the following methods of reducing barriers to use of an Ethics consult service: 1) Consults need to offer specific recommendations 2) set expectations for the consultation process and outcome; 3) ensure that Ethics consultants have strong training; 4) more actively engage nursing staff, and 5) better inform clinicians about the availability of the Ethics consult service.


2018 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Popham ◽  
Jennifer Lavoie ◽  
Nicole Coomber

This article reports on community perspectives about the regulation of municipality-led Big Data initiatives developed through an exploratory, deliberative democracy-informed approach. While analytics hold great promise for policy design and service delivery improvements, their mythologized nature may elicit a blind faith in empirical outcomes, leading to misrepresentation or omission of marginalized populations. Scholars have begun pointing to public consultation as a means of avoiding these challenges, suggesting that a truly “smart city” should vet potential Big Data polices through the community in order to identify locally relevant concerns. The Big Data in Cities: Barriers and Benefits symposium, held in May of 2017, took a deliberative democracy approach designed to contribute toward a midsized southern Ontario city’s regulatory framework for data aggregation and mobilization. Approximately 100 self-selected participants (primarily public advocates) attended a 2-day symposium that featured a series of presentations designed to introduce critiques to and strategies for the implementation of Big Data initiatives. Participants also engaged in several facilitated roundtable discussions during the symposium, and their transcribed conversations served as the data for this study. Thematic analysis identified three recurrent concerns: publicly vetted data ethics, consultation and literacy practices, and regulatory frameworks. The public consultation process employed by this study produced results that reflect critiques raised in other academic papers.


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