By Gene Edward Veith
What do you do when you have an
ancient, authoritative document that you have committed yourself to follow, and
yet it stands in judgment against contemporary values and practice?
One alternative is to change your positions so that they accord with what the
document teaches—after all, that is what it means to acknowledge an authority.
Another alternative is to change the document, so that it fits your current
position.
What Today’s New International
Version does to the Bible, the medical profession worldwide has just done to the
Hippocratic Oath.
For 2,500 years, since medicine was
first put on a scientific foundation by the Greek physician Hippocrates, those
embarking on a career in the medical profession have sworn to uphold a specific
standard of ethics designed for those assuming the life-and-death
responsibilities of being doctors.
The Hippocratic Oath eloquently committed physicians to “do no harm.” Its
principles applied across the centuries—even anticipating problems that would
become bigger issues today, such as forbidding the sexual abuse of patients. The
problem, though, is that Hippocrates was resolutely pro-life. The Oath, to which
nearly all medical-school graduates solemnly swore, forbids both euthanasia and
abortion.
Those doctors who went into the
abortion business were perjuring themselves, so the Oath became something of an
embarrassment. Many medical schools began to leave out parts of the Oath, or to
substitute vague platitudes for the specific language of Hippocrates, or to drop
the swearing of the oath altogether.
“Ten commitments”
But now, in a global effort, the medical profession has established a brand new
code of ethics designed to replace the Hippocratic Oath altogether.
The Medical Professionalism
Project, consisting of a panel of physicians from around the world, after many
years’ study, published a set of principles designed to guide the practice of
medicine in “the new millennium.” The document, published simultaneously in
recent issues of the major British and American medical journals—Lancet and the
Annals of Internal Medicine—is titled “The Charter of Medical Professionalism.”
Whereas the Hippocratic Oath is a
succinct 364 words in the English translation, the Charter is 1,445 words that
say much less. What Hippocrates asked of physicians is an “oath”—a serious
promise, a vow made to the gods of medicine in its original Greek formulation,
and to “almighty God” in Christian medical schools. The Charter is more in the
form of a corporate mission statement, a series of “professional commitments,”
in line with doctors’ new status as health-maintenance-organization workers, as
opposed to following a divinely ordained calling.
The Charter is organized around
three “principles.” The “principle of primacy of patient welfare” calls for
“altruism,” saying nothing, of course, about the specifics of not performing
euthanasia or abortion, or even “doing no harm.” It does say that “market
forces” should not be allowed to interfere with “the best interests of the
patient.”
Much of the document is devoted to
the “principle of patient autonomy.” Decisions have to be left to the patients.
This formally enshrines “pro-choice” thinking as the guiding standard for
medical ethics.
Then there is the “principle of
social justice.” This commits the medical profession to the shibboleths of
liberal political rhetoric—”the fair distribution of health-care resources,
non-discrimination” for “race, gender, socioeconomic status, ethnicity,
religion, or any other social category.”
These principles are then unpacked
in a series of 10 “commitments” (not commandments):
• to professional competence,
• to honesty with patients,
• to patient confidentiality,
• to maintaining appropriate relations with patients;
• to improving quality of care,
• to improving access to care,
• to a just distribution of finite resources,
• to scientific knowledge,
• to maintaining trust by managing conflicts of interest, and
• to professional responsibilities.
The Charter avoids the language of
morality, setting forth a few guidelines for corporate procedure without
grounding them, as the Hippocratic Oath does, in transcendent moral absolutes.
The medical profession obviously
feels a need for ethical direction, but this is difficult to manufacture apart
from belief in absolute moral truths. How different is the “Charter of Medical
Professionalism,” with its preoccupation with economics and bureaucracy, from
the Hippocratic pledge: “With purity and with holiness I will pass my life and
practice my Art.”
Gene Edward Veith writes for World
magazine. This article is reprinted with permission from World Magazine, Inc,
copyright 2002.
Our regular “Last Word” columnist,
Diogenes, is taking a brief vacation and will return in our June issue.