Proceedings of the Third International Bioethics Seminar
in Fukui, 19- 21 November, 1993. Editors: Norio Fujiki, MD, and Darryl R.
J. Macer, Ph.D. Christchurch, New Zealand: Eubios Ethics Institute, 1995.
The disaster that Hesiod sees threatening a community that disregards
justice... is not an eternity of damnation but the failure of nature to work -
of crops to grow, of herds to bear, of women to produce normal children.
In the developing nations of the third world, infectious diseases continue to
be a burden on the health care system and are the bane of the poor. The
developed nations, freed of most of these diseases, are now grappling with
chronic diseases at extremes of age.
As has been elegantly pointed out in the text of the proceedings of the
seminar, the ability of modem medicine to prolong life in case of intractable
neurological disorders in adults and to prenatally diagnose uncorrectable
neurological diseases raises ethical, legal and social dilemmas which have never
been required to be addressed in the past. Interventions at the end of life
(ventilator care) or at the beginning of life or even pre- life (prenatal)
represent major financial and administrative outlays.
The need for community based care is of utmost importance in these groups of
patients. Continual medical therapy after the patient is sent home from hospital
by ‘home- visit medical programme’ is a revolutionary concept introduced in
Japan. On the one hand it maintains continued medical supervision of the patient
at home after discharge and on the other it pre-empts situations whereby
patients are denied re- admission due to non- availability of hospital beds
during periods of symptom exacerbation at home. Deadlines indicating termination
of periods of in- hospital care facility may become a reality world-wide
following escalating expense of medical care.
It has been succinctly mentioned that patient care is no more the exclusive
domain of the scientific- medical community but has to necessarily consider the
right of self- determination of the patient and hold social, ethical and
financial implications in perspective. Dignity of life, quality of life and
sanctity of life are concepts which will seldom yield a solution in harmony when
confronted with the request for euthanasia.
Human genome studies raise the spectre of ‘eugenics’ as practised by the
Nazis in European war prisons and the Japanese in Manchuria during the Second
World War. In the following decades those blots on scientific study have been
virtually cleansed. However, any new forays into genome research and genetic
manipulations will have bio- ethical implications.
Genetic research is a widely accepted and encouraged subject. Prenatal
genetic diagnosis, on the one hand, reliably predicts the probable occurrence of
disease in the future and, on the other, offers the option of early
implementation of primary prevention strategies such as dietary restriction and
pharmacologic manipulation in primary hypercholesterolemia. Is our response the
same to untreatable manifestations like Huntington’s disease?
The debate for legalised abortions at will for social or eugenic reasons will
never be conclusively resolved. Is the human genome really sacred? Who will be
the final arbitrator in allowing expression of one gene with so called superior
qualities or obliterating the appearance of a gene with perceived inferiority or
abnormality? Such questions have never needed to be answered in the bygone ages
but will keep surfacing and nagging the human race in the future. The ‘white
man’s burden’ has surpassed all conceivable limits.
AJAY NAIK,Senior Resident, Department
of Cardiology, Seth G. S. Medical College and KEM Hospital, Parel, Mumbai
400 012.
Bioethics in high schools in Australia, Japan
and New Zealand.
AJAY NAIK
Darryl RJ Macer, Yukiko Asada, Miho Tsuzuki, Shiro Akiyama, Nobuko Y.
Macer. Christchurch, New Zealand: Eubios Ethics Institute, 1996.
Growing concern on ethics in research and medicine has prompted the investigation
into the need for a formal curriculum in the field of bioethics.
The survey conducted by Macer and co-workers sought to identify the
recognition, perception and inculcation of bioethical values in high schools in
Australia, Japan and New Zealand. Although an impersonal form of survey
(questionnaire) had been used without direct personal contact; it is perhaps a
telling comment on the state and awareness of this concept that less than 50%
replies (collectively) could be obtained, despite reminders. This is a stark
statement on the prevalent situation as the subjects to whom these
questionnaires were directed were teachers, who are instrumental in shaping
young minds and moulding their thought processes. In view of the fact that
biology and social studies teachers were contacted it is but natural that animal
experiments were the prime concern. The next most telling issues concerned in
vitro fertilisation, surrogate motherhood, prenatal diagnosis, abortions, use of
pesticides, genetic engineering and genetic manipulation in plants and animals.
Use of animals in behavioural experiments as well as in dissections is
encountered in almost two- thirds of the schools from which replies were
received. The concerns voiced were similar, whether the primary objective of
education was achieved with animal experiments, whether animals could be
substituted by inanimate objects, whether observation in nature can replace the
experiments or a facility to return the animal to nature could be implemented.
A touching response was that it is sad to use any kind of creatures for
experiments, but the strength of the opinion weakened for animals of lower
order, from invertebrates downward to plankton. The concern for vertebrates is
more than that for invertebrates, and lesser still for the lower order
invertebrates.
Whereas it was deemed acceptable to carry out genetic manipulation for
increasing the yield of cash crops and increase the yield of milk in cattle,
respondents frowned upon attempts to harvest the rich genetic pools of tribals
of Afro- Asian nations. Perhaps optimal practice of bioethics will finally imply
treading the middle path of attempting to do the best for the most rather than
striving for the unattainable ideal.
AJAY NAIK,Senior Resident, Department
of Cardiology, Seth G. S. Medical College and KEM Hospital, Parel, Mumbai
400 012.
A handbook of the Department of Anatomy,
SUNIL K. PANDYA
Seth G. S. Medical College, Parel, Mumbai. Anonymous,
Department of Anatomy, Seth G. S. Medical College, Parel, Mumbai 400012. 1997
p 128. Paperback.
Most of us are troubled by doubts and depression as we witness the general
decline in standards of teaching and the shenanigans of those in charge of
private medical colleges. This book offers solace and hope for here is a
department attempting to build on past experience and extend its capabilities in
a pioneering effort at imparting a clinical orientation to undergraduate
anatomical education.
The preface emphasises: “... An understanding of the basic sciences is
essential to a complete understanding of disease. Pathology and clinical
medicine, in their turn, improve one’s perception of the basic sciences. Each
elucidating the other, they are inextricably linked in a glorious, ever-
expanding circle...The handbook is designed to serve as a compass rather than a
road map... It lets (the student) know what is most relevant to later study... ”
Dr. S. M. Bhatnagar sets the pace by emphasising the relevance of anatomy to
the medical student and to the doctor. Dr. M. L. Kothari talks of the joy of
studying anatomy and travelling along the road that will serve both the student
and his future patients without fail. Dr. Lopa Mehta, head of the department,
succinctly discusses the ‘how’ of learning the subject, emphasising the use of
both parietal lobes by an inquisitive mind that takes nothing for granted.
The next chapter provides a brief history of the department with thumbnail
sketches of the various helmsmen from Dr. R. P. Koppikar to M. L. Kothari.
Subsequent chapters introduce the reader to the anatomy of the department of
anatomy, its faculty, courses offered, the academic calendar, dissection
schedule, description of diagrams to be drawn by each student in their journals
and list of recommended texts.
The student is then told of the system of evaluation followed by the
department. The top three levels consist of 'May know’, ‘Desirable to know’ and
‘Must know’. Those ignorant of items grouped under ‘must know’ are deemed to
have failed. They may have stumbled in understanding fundamental concepts (level
four) or, indeed, have no concept at all (level five).
The appendix lists the syllabus prescribed by the University of Mumbai.
Why are we reviewing a book on anatomy in a journal on ethics?
First of all, the volume sets a moral tone throughout. Consider this
statement under ‘Evaluation’ : “The maximum attention is paid... to provide such
a milieu wherein students feel mentally and physically free to have independent
thinking, healthy interaction amongst peers as well as with teachers and find
their own self-confidence, self- reliance and creative potentials. To sum up,
the student cultivates a healthy attitude towards life in general, and towards
other human beings and life forms...” Lofty ideals, indeed, to be heartily
applauded.
Secondly, the department has travelled far beyond its mandate. Let me provide
an example. It has established a library of images - x-ray films, computerised
tomographic and magnetic resonance images and sonographic studies - that help
the candidate link what has been seen in the dissection hall to that seen in the
living individual in the wards of the hospital.
The department also provides financial aid to needy students through
donations from individuals, trusts and private funds in addition to that offered
by the Municipal Corporation.
Finally, by guiding the student thus, with understanding and empathy, the
volume sets a precedent that needs to be emulated by other departments in the
same institutions and those in other institutions.
SUNIL K. PANDYA,Department of Neurosurgery,
KEM Hospital, Parel, Mumbai 4000 12
Euthanasia
There is a long tradition of welcoming
death as a positive good: call no man happy, said the lawgiver Solon, till he
dies, he is at best fortunate.
And Francis Bacon, who achieved more philosophical detachment in his
Essays than in his shady financial dealings, wrote famously of the absurdity of
the fear of death. "Men fear death as children fear to go into the dark."
Theodore Dalrymple inSo little done