Compassion
and conflict.
Compassion
is a virtue much touted in health care. Many
organizations and individuals would claim compassion as one of their key
values. Good thing too – compassion is
the sympathetic feeling of another’s pain and suffering. Compassion requires us
to put ourselves in another’s position and to see and feel the world as he or
she does. Compassion requires us to see others
as persons and to treat them accordingly.
But what happens when compassion runs into conflict with other, deeply
held, values?
What does
an organization – or an individual, do then?
For
organizations, “accountability, or stewardship” have always been values in
potential conflict with compassion.
Accountability and stewardship are values of fairness, and resource
management for organizations. A health
care organization ought to make the most efficient use of its resources as possible. (“Efficient,” of course, is a loaded term,
and might mean a variety of things, but at its heart is something like getting
the best health care results possible for the available resources.) But accountability and stewardship require
declining to do certain things or provide certain services. Stewardship and accountability require saying
no to patient or community requests that, for example, have a low probability
of success, or that bring minimal improvements to health and well-being. But that, of course, may well mean saying no
to someone, begging for hope, a person in the extremity of his or her need, to
whom one’s heart goes out in compassion.
What should the “good” administrator or organization do?
Medical Aid
in Dying (MAID) poses a new challenge in compassion for both organizations –
and individuals. It is clear, that for
many people seeking MAID this is a last desperate request for an end to
intolerable suffering. From the
perspective of the person concerned his or her suffering is intolerable and
cannot be relieved by any method that person him or herself can accept. For
such a person death may be the choice as the “least worst” option. Anyone in such a situation demands our
compassion. But what happens if that
demand on compassion conflicts with, for instance, the religious beliefs of the
faith-based, health care organization, or an organization’s foundational
professional commitments (some understandings of hospice-based palliative care)?
Is it compassionate to transfer a dying patient out of a faith-based hospital,
or out of a Hospice, to receive medical aid in dying at another facility?
The same
moral dilemma exists for individuals.
While a person’s personal and professional moral or ethical commitments
may well have assumed “Do no harm,” Medical Aid in Dying poses a compassionate
challenge to exactly what is meant by “harm.”
The patient seeking Medical Aid In Dying is asking us to understand that
from his or her perspective it is continued life that is the harm, and death is
the compassionately granted relief.
As usual,
there is not an answer here – just another example of the complexity of our
moral lives.
1 comment:
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