In the olden days, physicians had the dominant role in the doctor-patient relationship. During this era of medical paternalism, physicians gave their best medical advice and patients accepted it. If the gastroenterologist felt that his patient’s gallbladder had to go, for example, then surgery was sure to follow. Informed consent – as we now understand its meaning – was not fully practiced. Patients provided consent but were only partially informed.
While medical paternalism has largely become extinct, and is
inconsistent with today’s societal and medical mores, it was the template for
medical practice until only decades ago.
And while we regard the subjugation of patient autonomy to be a
fundamental ethical breach, both physicians and patients during that era were
perfectly satisfied with the arrangement.
A patient came to the doctor with medical issues. The doctor -the medical professional -
offered advice that the patient accepted.
The patient’s condition improved, as usually occurs, and all was good in
the world.
The relationship was inherently unequal because only one of
the two parties had medical knowledge and experience. A similar construct might be present if a
person consulted an attorney, an accountant or an electrician. Many folks defer to the professionals they
hire. I certainly do so in many
instances.
I have only practiced medicine in the era where patient
autonomy is sacrosanct. While no system
is perfect, I agree that the current system is ethically preferable and now
designates that an informed patient is the decision maker. We are also now more aware and sensitive that
patients may consider cultural, financial and religious beliefs and realities
in addition to the medical facts when making medical decisions. In a stark example of this, a physician may
strenuously advise a patient to accept blood transfusions because his life is
at risk. The patient, who is a Jehovah’s
Witness, calculates the issue differently.
A common term used to describe today’s dynamic between
doctors and patients is ‘shared decision making’. The office visit is a brainstorming session,
a collaboration between two parties.
I have found that many patients today aren’t satisfied just to
share authority. They have taken a
lesson from the doctors of yesteryear and are practicing Patient
Paternalism. The patient dictates the
medical advice. We doctors hear this all
the time. A patient will tell me
directly, or communicate to me via the electronic portal, statements such as
these:
I need a CAT scan.
Please order it.
I need antibiotics.
My diverticulitis is acting up.
I think my pancreas is underactive. I need that test I saw on a TV commercial.
I need to have my stomach scoped again. I’m sure my ulcer is back.
As in any successful relationship, I think it works best if
neither party dictates to the other.
I wholly support patient autonomy and have great respect for
the doctrine of informed consent. The
irony is there are many patients today who eschew their right to autonomy. They just want their doctors to tell them
what to do.
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