1. What Should Clinicians Do When a Patient's Autonomy Undermines Her Being Treated Equitably?
- Author
-
Scharf, Amy, Voigt, Louis, Vardhana, Santosha, Matsoukas, Konstantina, Wall, Lisa M., Arevalo, Maria, and Diamond, Lisa C.
- Subjects
- *
COMMUNICATION , *DECISION making , *FAMILIES , *HEALTH services accessibility , *LANGUAGE & languages , *PHYSICIAN-patient relations , *PHYSICIANS , *HEALTH facility translating services , *OCCUPATIONAL roles , *CULTURAL competence , *PATIENT autonomy - Abstract
Language and cultural barriers can impede communication between patients and clinicians, exacerbating health inequity. Additional complications can arise when family members, intending to protect their loved ones, ask clinicians to lie or not disclose to patients their diagnoses, prognoses, or intervention options. Clinicians must express respect for patients' and families' cultural, religious, and social norms regarding health care decision making, but they might also be ethically troubled by some decisions' effects on patients' health outcomes. This article suggests strategies for clinicians trying to overcome linguistic and cultural barriers to equitable patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF