Medical staff punished after privacy breach in Pennsylvania hospital
by Michael Cook | 30 Sep 2017 |
Respect for patients’ privacy is a work in progress, to judge from an incident in UPMC Bedford Memorial Hospital, in Pennsylvania. On December 23 last year surgeons were removing a “foreign body” from the genitals of a female patient. Somehow other staff were notified of this novelty and the operating theatre became so crowded that “it looked like a cheerleader type pyramid,” according one witness quoted in a state government report.
Worse still, operating room staff took pictures with their mobile phones and circulated them to other staff.
The Pennsylvania Department of Health declared that the hospital had violated several standards:
When the incident came to light, hospital staff tried to excuse it. Mobile phones had to be used because the operating room camera was broken. It then turned out that it was not broken, but it was complicated to use.
On staff member recounted "it was a couple days before Christmas, I received a picture text on my phone from Anesthesia, made a comment and moved on. We do pass on interesting stuff..."
Bioethicist Craig Klugman commented on the issue in the bioethics.net blog:
Worse still, operating room staff took pictures with their mobile phones and circulated them to other staff.
The Pennsylvania Department of Health declared that the hospital had violated several standards:
- Failing to protect a patient's confidentiality and privacy
- Allowing people not involved in the patient's care into the operating room
- Allowing them to use personal devices to take pictures of the patient
When the incident came to light, hospital staff tried to excuse it. Mobile phones had to be used because the operating room camera was broken. It then turned out that it was not broken, but it was complicated to use.
On staff member recounted "it was a couple days before Christmas, I received a picture text on my phone from Anesthesia, made a comment and moved on. We do pass on interesting stuff..."
Bioethicist Craig Klugman commented on the issue in the bioethics.net blog:
... taking pictures of patients without their consent and using their vulnerable bodies as a source of amusement or entertainment is a gross violation of ethics. A patient is not a carnival sideshow exhibit. This is a human being who has placed her or his trust and well-being in the hands of the medical professionals. There is an ethical and legal expectation of confidentiality. These actions are nothing less than a violation of trust...While having a policy and providing education are necessary steps, they are not sufficient. The culture of medicine which tolerates seeing patients as objects is the core of the problem and needs to change.
Most of us have an ambivalent attitude towards drug addicts. Can they stop? No, their will power is shot to pieces. Will you invite one home to dinner? No, he’s a drug addict. However inconsistent it might be, we manage to dismiss addiction as morally serious and stigmatize them at the same time.
The Massachusetts Supreme Court is due to hear a case on drug addiction which could have wide-ranging consequences. Julie Eldred, an addict, relapsed while on parole and was jailed. (See story below.) But jailing her was wrong, according to the Massachusetts Medical Society, because opioid use is a chronic illness, not a character defect.
The opposite point of view is represented by 11 addiction experts in an amicus curiae brief. They argue that “Most addicts quit and do so on their own. Addiction seems to be among the most spontaneously ‘remitting’ of all the conditions termed major mental disorders, which is a very inconvenient fact for the position that addiction is a ‘chronic and relapsing brain disease.’”
The outcome of the argument will have immense legal and social consequences. If the addict is helpless in the grip of his or her disease, punishment makes no sense. The whole criminal law would change. To be continued....
The Massachusetts Supreme Court is due to hear a case on drug addiction which could have wide-ranging consequences. Julie Eldred, an addict, relapsed while on parole and was jailed. (See story below.) But jailing her was wrong, according to the Massachusetts Medical Society, because opioid use is a chronic illness, not a character defect.
The opposite point of view is represented by 11 addiction experts in an amicus curiae brief. They argue that “Most addicts quit and do so on their own. Addiction seems to be among the most spontaneously ‘remitting’ of all the conditions termed major mental disorders, which is a very inconvenient fact for the position that addiction is a ‘chronic and relapsing brain disease.’”
The outcome of the argument will have immense legal and social consequences. If the addict is helpless in the grip of his or her disease, punishment makes no sense. The whole criminal law would change. To be continued....
Michael Cook Editor BioEdge |
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