Dr Ewan C Goligher |
Canadian policy
makers have recently proposed to require all doctors to provide an effective
referral for physician-assisted death (PAD) upon the patient’s request. Forcing
doctors to knowingly send their patient to another doctor willing to cause the
patient’s death will seriously compromise the moral integrity of
conscientiously objecting doctors and risks undermining the quality of patient
care. To understand the position of conscientiously objecting doctors, consider
the following questions.
1. Should doctors provide
physician-assisted death merely because it is legal?
Doctors should provide PAD only if it is both legal and
ethical. The Supreme Court has ruled that PAD ought not to be legally
prohibited, but it cannot define whether it is ethical for doctors to intentionally
cause death. In their decision on the legality of PAD, the Supreme Court
Justices stated that “nothing in this decision would compel physicians to
provide assistance in dying.” The Justices recognize that we need not
automatically accept that PAD is ethical in the wake of this sweeping change in
law.
2. Must all doctors
accept the assumptions underpinning the claim that physician-assisted
death is good medical care?
Advocates for
PAD contend that death should be used to treat
suffering because for some patients, death is better than life. This assumes some notion of what it is
like to be dead. Yet the medical profession has no idea what it is like to be
dead. All beliefs about the afterlife (including the belief that there is no
afterlife) are metaphysical (quasi-religious) beliefs which cannot be confirmed
or refuted by scientific medical evidence. Thus PAD is innately experimental
and its outcomes are hidden from us. Though there is always a measure of
uncertainty in medicine, medical care must be based on evidence and observation
and sound reasoning, and doctors should not be forced to practice medicine
based on untestable quasi-religious assumptions.
The case for PAD also assumes that respect for the patient’s
wishes, rather than respect for the patient as a whole, is the foundational
value of medical ethics. Respect for the patient’s wishes is unquestionably
part of respecting the patient, but valuing these wishes above the patient
herself would prevent doctors from ever refusing any patient request, even if
it would clearly harm her health. The long-accepted firm foundation for medical
ethics (including the duty to respect the patient’s wishes) is the incalculable
intrinsic objective worth of the patient. Intentionally causing death would
require us to render valueless that which is of essential value: the patient.
In sum, given the tenuous assumptions underpinning the case
for PAD, doctors need not accept that PAD is good medical care.
3. If physician-assisted death remained
illegal, would doctors be legally liable for making
an effective referral?
If a father were to request that his daughter undergo
circumcision (i.e. genital mutilation), and I deliberately provided an
effective referral to a willing physician, I would be complicit in an extremely
grievous breach of medical ethics. This scenario is not ethically identical to
PAD but it effectively illustrates the moral and ethical responsibility
attached to an effective referral. This moral responsibility is recognized in
law: doctors are legally liable for referring a patient for a procedure that is
forbidden by law, even if requested by the patient (as was the case for PAD
until now). Knowingly referring a patient to a physician willing to cause the
patient’s death makes doctors complicit in that death. Therefore, if upon considered
moral reflection we find that PAD is unethical, we ought not to provide
referrals for PAD.
4. Does the Charter
right of Freedom of Conscience apply to doctors?
Some argue that doctors cannot claim the Charter right of
Freedom of Conscience because we willingly accept responsibilities and duties
that limit our freedom when we commit to care for the patient. Accordingly,
doctors are duty-bound to deliberately cause death upon the patient’s voluntary
request. This argument is successful only if PAD is ethical: the commitment to
care does not extend to providing unethical care. Doctors are duty-bound to
ensure that their patient’s suffering is relieved by all effective means
available. Whether this commitment entails a duty to cause death is a controversial
moral question contingent upon certain philosophical assumptions. Those who
insist upon a duty to refer for PAD impose their personal ethical beliefs and
assumptions upon others. The freedom of individuals to decide this issue and to
act in accordance with one’s deeply held moral beliefs is precisely what the
Charter right of Freedom of Conscience protects.
5. How does respect
for conscientious objection affect patient care?
Even given the assumption that PAD is ethical, robust
respect for conscientious objection is still ultimately good for patients. Patients
entrust themselves to their doctors, and doctors must be worthy of this trust. The
doctor’s moral integrity—a commitment to acting in accordance with moral norms—is
foundational to his/her trustworthiness. Suppressing conscientious objection
prizes moral conformity over moral integrity and systematically teaches
physicians to suppress their basic moral intuitions in favour of constantly
evolving social conventions. It also teaches the profession to be less
sympathetic of and tolerant toward patients’ diverse moral beliefs. Thus,
robust respect for conscientious objection should be viewed as an important
public good that upholds the quality of medical care.
6. Will respect for conscientious
objection obstruct access to physician-assisted death?
Upholding respect for conscientious objection to PAD need
not present a significant obstacle to obtaining PAD. Making referrals mandatory
does not immediately guarantee access as PAD will not be routinely provided by
any particular medical specialty and many in the medical community do not know physicians
willing to accept such referrals. Conscientious objectors have proposed simple
solutions allowing patients to refer themselves for PAD, and this may in fact be
the most reliable means of facilitating access. Yet policy makers have
disregarded such proposals to this point. Carefully considered policy frameworks for providing PAD can show robust
respect for conscientious objection while enabling universal patient
access.
Dr. Ewan Goligher practices intensive care
medicine in Toronto. The views expressed here are his own and do not necessarily
reflect the views of any institutions with which he is affiliated. Visit
www.canadiansforconscience.ca to learn more.
That's because it's not about access or conscience. The issue is making sure everyone toes the party line, and that popular wisdom says you don't have a conscience when you are a professional. I have seen people say in public that if doctors don't want to kill then they should leave the field. Well and good, but that doesn't talk about conscience rights at all. It simply reinforces the popular view. And popularity in life and death is something we all want, isn't it? The conundra around this is about control of the other, not freedom of persons.
ReplyDeleteThere could be a bypass method for doctors of conscience in which patients wishing to be euthanized would apply to a government body composed of doctors willing to be involved.In other words there should be a special licence beyond a doctors college regulated licence to practice.Call it a special "licence to kill" if you like!The notion that all doctors should get involved one way or the other is cynical.The notion of there being a special licence for PAD would then actually make it illegal for any physician the perform PAD without such a licence.
ReplyDelete