Communicating moral reasoning in medicine as an expression of respect for patients and integrity among professionals

Authors

  • Lauris Christopher Kaldjian University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v10i2.177

Keywords:

communication, ethics, integrity, medicine, moral reasoning, pluralism

Abstract

The communication of moral reasoning in medicine can be understood as a means of showing respect for patients and colleagues through the giving of moral reasons for actions. This communication is especially important when disagreements arise. While moral reasoning should strive for impartiality, it also needs to acknowledge the individual moral beliefs and values that distinguish each person (moral particularity) and give rise to the challenge of contrasting moral frameworks (moral pluralism). Efforts to communicate moral reasoning should move beyond common approaches to principles-based reasoning in medical ethics by addressing the underlying beliefs and values that define our moral frameworks and guide our interpretations and applications of principles. Communicating about underlying beliefs and values requires a willingness to grapple with challenges of accessibility (the degree to which particular beliefs and values are intelligible between persons) and translatability (the degree to which particular beliefs and values can be transposed from one moral framework to another) as words and concepts are used to communicate beliefs and values. Moral dialogues between professionals and patients and among professionals themselves need to be handled carefully, and sometimes these dialogues invite reference to underlying beliefs and values. When professionals choose to articulate such beliefs and values, they can do so as an expression of respectful patient care and collaboration and as a means of promoting their own moral integrity by signalling the need for consistency between their own beliefs, words and actions.

Author Biography

  • Lauris Christopher Kaldjian, University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine
    Lauris Kaldjian received his MD from the University of Michigan and PhD in Religious Ethics from Yale University. He is currently Professor and Director of the Program in Bioethics and Humanities, Carver College of Medicine, University of Iowa where he holds the Richard M. Caplan Chair in Biomedical Ethics and Medical Humanities. His research interests include physician–patient communication, philosophical and religious beliefs in clinical decision-making, and ethics education.

Published

2014-03-11

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Kaldjian, L. C. (2014). Communicating moral reasoning in medicine as an expression of respect for patients and integrity among professionals. Communication and Medicine, 10(2), 177-183. https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v10i2.177