Core Principles - The Big Four
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Autonomy: The patient's right to make informed, voluntary, and competent decisions about their own medical care.
- Foundation for informed consent, truth-telling, and confidentiality.
- Respects individual values, even if they conflict with the physician's recommendations.
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Beneficence: The duty to act in the best interest of the patient; to promote their well-being.
- Focuses on providing a net benefit to the patient.
- Core concept: "Do good."
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Non-maleficence: The duty to avoid causing unnecessary harm to the patient.
- "Primum non nocere" or "First, do no harm."
- Requires balancing the potential benefits against the risks of any intervention.
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Justice: Fair and equitable distribution of healthcare resources and treatment.
- Treating similar cases with similar care, regardless of patient characteristics.
- Applies to both individual patient encounters and societal resource allocation.

⭐ Ethical dilemmas frequently arise from conflicts between these principles, most commonly pitting patient Autonomy against physician Beneficence (e.g., a patient refusing a life-saving treatment).
Ethical Theories - Duty vs. Outcomes
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Deontology (Duty-Based)
- Focuses on inherent rightness/wrongness of an act, not its consequences.
- Associated with Immanuel Kant.
- An act is moral if it follows a universal rule (e.g., "do not lie," "do not steal").
- The physician's duty to the individual patient is paramount.
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Consequentialism (Outcome-Based)
- Judges an act based on its results.
- Utilitarianism: A common form; seeks the "greatest good for the greatest number."
- An action is moral if it maximizes positive outcomes and minimizes harm for the largest group.
⭐ In clinical dilemmas, Deontology prioritizes individual patient duties (e.g., confidentiality), while Utilitarianism might justify breaking that duty for a greater public good (e.g., warning others of a direct threat).
Practical Application - Consent & Capacity
- Informed Consent: A process ensuring patient voluntarism & autonomy. Not just a form.
- 📌 BRAIN: Benefits, Risks, Alternatives, Implications of No treatment.
- Exceptions: Emergencies, waiver, therapeutic privilege (rare), incapacity.
- Decision-Making Capacity: A clinical assessment; competence is a legal term.
- Assessed if a patient refuses recommended treatment or makes questionable decisions.
- Requires the patient to:
- Communicate a choice.
- Understand relevant information.
- Appreciate the situation & consequences.
- Reason about treatment options.
⭐ A patient with capacity has the right to refuse any medical treatment, including life-sustaining therapy, even if it results in death. This is a cornerstone of patient autonomy.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- Beneficence (act in patient's best interest) and Non-maleficence (do no harm) are core duties.
- Autonomy respects a patient's right to make informed decisions about their own body.
- Justice ensures fair allocation of healthcare resources and equitable treatment.
- Informed consent is a process, not just a signature; requires decision-making capacity.
- Confidentiality is paramount but can be breached to prevent serious harm to self or others.
- Ethical dilemmas often involve conflicts between these fundamental principles.
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