In the issue of Journal of Medical Ethics dated March 1993 (19, 7-12, 1993) Povl Riis of Denmark pleads for uniform standards for medical ethics in Europe. In doing so he makes several statements that are worth pondering.
He emphasises the need for personal freedom, gained over centuries from the iron grips of churches, kings, dictators and regimes. He refers to the need for ‘the voice of the people’ and shows how apathy and prohibition are unsatisfactory reactions in a modern society. Three levels of interactions are discussed: 1) Interpersonal, 2) person-state, 3) existential/religious, the greatest variation often being found at the third level when religious faiths such as Catholic, Islamic, Jewish, Lutheran go their different ways.
All ethical debates start on the basis of current shortcomings. Fundamental human rights were enunciated in the face of severe suppression. The concept of equality was born in the face of slavery and racism. Freedom for women was a counter to male sexism. The debate on medical ethics became commonplace after the development of technological capabilities such as that for keeping a person ‘alive’ on machines that supported functions of the heart and lungs even after the brain was dead; the use of organs from one human being to benefsit another; the ability to look into the womb (by sonography and amniocentesis) and the several malpractices that each such ‘advance’ has spawned. Ethical dilemmas are being explored and citizens have progressively demanded co-responsibility in medical decision making.
He proposes four major areas for consideration:
Religions and churches can play an important role in furthering ethical concepts and practices and should be harnessed towards these goals.
In another paper in the same issue, Peter Toon from Bart’s, London (pages 17-18) suggests that standards of academic scholarship in bioethics are often poor in Europe and points to the need to make medical students more virtuous.
Consider the above thoughts in the light of what we are doing in our own country. We haven’t even started scratching the surface of the massive ethical problems we face in biology and medicine.