Affiliation:
1. Department of Anesthesiology, Texas Tech Health Sciences Center, Lubbock, TX
Abstract
Ethical and legal considerations in pain management typically relate to 2 issues. The
first refers to pain management as a human right. The second involves the nature of
the patient-physician relationship as it relates to pain management. Although pain
physicians often like to think of pain management as a human right, it remains difficult to support this position as a point of law or as a matter of ethics. Medical organizations generally do not define pain management as a specific duty of the physician,
apart from the provision of competent medical care. To date, neither law nor ethics
creates a duty of care outside of the traditional patient-physician relationship. Absent
a universal duty, no universal right exists. Pursuing pain management as a fundamental human right, although laudable, may place the power of the government in the
middle of the patient-physician relationship. Despite apparent altruistic motives, attempts to define pain management as a basic human right could have unintended
consequences, such as nationalization of medicine to ensure provision of pain management for all patients.
Key words: Ethics, law, patient-physician relationship, human right, pain
management
Publisher
American Society of Interventional Pain Physicians
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Cited by
4 articles.
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