Ethics Consultation: Skills, Roles, and Training
- John La Puma, MD; and
- David L. Schiedermayer, MD
Abstract
A clinical ethics consultant gathers information firsthand at the patient's bedside. The consultant's special clinical skills include the ability to identify and analyze ethical problems; use reasonable clinical judgment; communicate effectively; negotiate and facilitate negotiations; and teach others how to construct their own ethical frameworks for medical decision making. Appropriate roles for the consultant include those of professional colleague, negotiator, patient and physician advocate, case manager, and educator. The training necessary for an ethics consultant includes substantial patient care experience, instruction in health care law and moral reasoning, and preparation in medical humanism. We favor a clinical model for ethics consultation. When urgent care is needed, other consultants promptly see the patient; the clinical ethics consultant can be expected to do the same.
Article and Author Information
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From the Lutheran General Hospital, Park Ridge, Illinois; and the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. For current author addresses, see end of text.
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Grant Support: In part by the Lutheran General Medical Group.
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Requests for Reprints: John La Puma, MD, Center for Clinical Ethics, Lutheran General Hospital, 1775 Dempster Street, Park Ridge, IL 60068.
- ©1991 American College of Physicians
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