Religious Values in Clinical Practice are Here to Stay

Alex Kappel Kørup, - and Jens Søndergaard, - and René dePont Christensen, - and René dePont Christensen, - and Connie Thurøe Nielsen, - and Giancarlo Lucchetti, - and Parameshwaran Ramakrishnan, - and Klaus Baumann, - and Eunmi Lee, - and Eckhard Frick, - and Arndt Büssing, - and Nada A. Alyousefi, - and Azimatul Karimah, - and Esther Schouten, - and Andreas Schulze, - and Inga Wermuth, - and Niels Christian Hvidt, - (2022) Religious Values in Clinical Practice are Here to Stay. Journal of Religion and Health, 52. pp. 188-194. ISSN 00224197

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Official URL: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10943-0...

Abstract

Research to date has shown that health professionals often practice according to personal values, including values based on faith, and that these values impact medicine in multiple ways. While some influence of personal values are inevitable, awareness of values is important so as to sustain beneficial practice without conflicting with the values of the patient. Detecting when own personal values, whether based on a theistic or atheistic worldview, are at work, is a daily challenge in clinical practice. Simultaneously ethical guidelines of tone-setting medical associations like American Medical Association, the British General Medical Council and Australian Medical Association have been updated to encompass physicians’ right to practice medicine in accord with deeply held beliefs. Framed by this context, we discuss the concept of value-neutrality and value-based medical practice of physicians from both a cultural and ethical perspective, and reach the conclusion that the concept of a completely value-neutral physician, free from influence of personal values and filtering out value-laden information when talking to patients, is simply an unrealistic ideal in light of existing evidence. Still we have no reason to suspect that personal values, whether religious, spiritual, atheistic or agnostic, should hinder physicians from delivering professional and patient-centered care.

Item Type: Article
Uncontrolled Keywords: Religion, Value-neutrality, Clinical practice, Physicians, Medical ethics
Subjects: R Medicine > R Medicine (General)
R Medicine > RC Internal medicine > RC475-489 Therapeutics. Psychotherapy
Divisions: 01. Fakultas Kedokteran > Psikiatri Anak dan Remaja (Sub Spesialis)
Creators:
CreatorsNIM
Alex Kappel Kørup, -UNSPECIFIED
Jens Søndergaard, -UNSPECIFIED
René dePont Christensen, -UNSPECIFIED
René dePont Christensen, -UNSPECIFIED
Connie Thurøe Nielsen, -UNSPECIFIED
Giancarlo Lucchetti, -UNSPECIFIED
Parameshwaran Ramakrishnan, -UNSPECIFIED
Klaus Baumann, -UNSPECIFIED
Eunmi Lee, -UNSPECIFIED
Eckhard Frick, -UNSPECIFIED
Arndt Büssing, -UNSPECIFIED
Nada A. Alyousefi, -UNSPECIFIED
Azimatul Karimah, -NIDN8880900016
Esther Schouten, -UNSPECIFIED
Andreas Schulze, -UNSPECIFIED
Inga Wermuth, -UNSPECIFIED
Niels Christian Hvidt, -UNSPECIFIED
Depositing User: arys fk
Date Deposited: 30 Apr 2023 13:52
Last Modified: 30 Apr 2023 13:52
URI: http://repository.unair.ac.id/id/eprint/125778
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