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Transcript
Professionalism in Dentistry
Areas of ethical concern by dentists (Robert Veatch):
1. Quality of Care
2. Advertising
3. Self-regulation/ “Denturism”
4. Patient Autonomy
5. Conflicts with patients
6. Justice
7. Intraprofessional relationships
8. Financial transactions
Dentistry and Professionalism
1) Dentists possess a distinctive expertise that consists of both
theoretical knowledge and skills for applying it in practice;
2) dentists’ expertise is a source of important benefits for those who
seek their assistance;
3) because of this expertise, dentists are accorded, both individually
and collectively, extensive autonomy in matters pertaining to it—that
is, dentists are self-regulating.
Do dentists have PROFESSIONAL obligations, too?
The Commercial Picture:
The Dental Clinic as a Jiffy Lube!
Are we professionals or producers?
The Normative Model:
Some History:
•
1839: the founding of the American Journal of Dental
Science to “disseminate correct principles and expose error.”
•
1840: the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery was
created, the first dental school in the US.
•
1840, the American Society of Dental Surgeons was
formed, the first professional association.
What is a profession?
•
The American College of Dentists (ACD) defines a profession as:
“an occupation involving relatively long and specialized preparation on
the level of higher education and governed by a special code of ethics.”
•
Paul Starr: “an occupation that regulates itself through
systematic, required training and collegial discipline; that has a base in
technical, specialized knowledge, and that has a service rather than
profit orientation, enshrined in a code of ethics.” Starr’s is often
considered the most complete definition since it includes service
orientation and self-regulation, both of which many view as essential to
defining a profession.
•
The fiduciary relationship.
Edmund Pelligrino: “Trust in professional relationships
is forced; it is trust generated by our need for help.
When we need a doctor, lawyer, or minister, we have
no choice but to trust someone, though we might
prefer to trust no one” (qtd. in Veatch, 25).
A solid view of a profession:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
The fiduciary relationship with clients
A base in technical, specialized knowledge
A service rather than a profit orientation
Enshrined in a code of ethics
Collegial discipline and self-regulation
Is dentistry a profession? Yes!
1. 1. Why does the community at large put so much of the
trust in the power that dentists have?
• The institution of dentistry as a profession, as understood in
the normative sense.
• These norms assure the community that the experts will use
their power in such a way as to secure the well-being of the
people whom they serve rather than placing their own
personal well-being ahead of their patients.
• Yes, the PATIENTS COME FIRST.
2. Dentists have obligations to their patients besides the
marketplace obligations of not coercing, cheating, etc.
Dentists have a positive obligation to work for the patient’s
well being by meeting the patient’s needs for dental care.
3. Dental care is not simply a commodity to be sold and
bought simply on the basis of people’s desire to buy it. Good
dental health is vital to people’s well being; it is an objectively
valuable necessity.
4. The relationship between the dentist and the patient is not
a competitive one. The dentist has obligations to the patient
to act for that patient’s well being in relation to oral health
and function. They need to work cooperatively, not
competitively.
5. Dentistry is a self-regulating profession. The ADA and other
associations have as much interest in assuring that patients
get proper care as they do in preserving the profession.
6. The dental school is not merely a training school. The
knowledge is handed over in the context of the student’s
understanding and undertaking of professional commitments.
Criticisms:
•
Is the knowledge of the “professions” any more
specialized than other fields?
•
Can we know, fully what is in the client’s best interest?
•
The problem of reporting incompetence, self-regulation.
Is that for the greater good or primarily for the good of the
profession?
• Bottom line: As professionals, we may not always live up to
our stated ideals as fully as we might; many professionals
have a genuine desire to serve. Even if we don’t always fulfill
our ideals, the ideals of a profession are still worthy
aspirations for all concerned.