CHARACTER
OF THE IDEAL PHYSICIAN: iman, taqwah, amanat, & akhlaq
Iman: Three aspects of iman
bear directly on medical practice: tauhid; predestination, qadar; and contemplation, tafakkur. The integrating paradigm of
tauhid enables the physician to practice integrated and balanced medical care.
Belief in qadar guides the physician in his work to know and understand that life
and health, and illness and cure are in the hands of Allah. He will understand that he is a tool and not the reason for the
cure; all cure if from Allah. The physician has limited knowledge and limited ability, qudrat,
and should therefore not be arrogant. After doing all what is humanly possible for his patients, the believing physician trusts
in Allah's help and support. A believing physician will know that he cannot change the time of death, ajal, since that is under Allah’s direct control. He will concentrate on improving quality of remaining
life for his patients. As the believing physician goes about his daily chores, he undertakes contemplation, tafakkur, about all what he sees. Medical knowledge and actual clinical experiences increase iman because the physician realizes the power and majesty of Allah who created the complex human organism and
who cures it from the most severe diseases.
Taqwat: A believing physician is conscious that Allah is watching
and is ever-present. He knows that other humans observe his actions. He will do well in public and private. He will strive
to know the permitted, halal, and do it. He will even more intensely strive to
know what is prohibited, haram, and avoid it. He will avoid being involved in prohibited medical procedures that result
in destruction of life such as abortion, euthanasia, and assisted suicide. He will keep away from fraud, false evidence, lying
and misrepresentation. He will not dispense forbidden, haram, medication.
Amanat: A believing physician will take his medical work as a trust,
amanat. The trust involves three dimensions: commitment and sincerity of intentions,
ikhlas al niyyat; quality work, itqan & ihsan; and social responsibility
of da’wa and being a role model, qudwat.
A sincere intention increases commitment. Medical practice is ‘ibadat for
the pleasure of Allah. Medicine is also a form of charity. The motivation of the physician should therefore be service and
not personal enrichment and material gain. A believing physician will try to excel in his clinical responsibilities by making
sure that he tries to achieve perfection, itqaan, and excellence, ihsaan. Professional competence cannot be
compromised in any way. It is a major sin to undertake any medical procedure beyond the level of competence of the physician.
A believing physician knows that he is accountable before Allah, the profession, and society at large. He will discharge his
duties honestly using the highest standards of good medical care. He will avoid harmful, doubtful, or unnecessary treatment.
He will strive to have regular updating of his knowledge and skills. He will engage in research for new and better treatment
modalities; every disease has a cure. A believing physician will know that he has societal responsibilities beyond the treatment
of disease. He will use any opportunities available to make da’wa to patients
and their relatives. He will work to eradicate or alleviate social root causes of disease. In his personal life he will strive
to be a role model of good character and behavior for the rest of society. He will not shy away from social leadership and
advocacy for the less privileged or the oppressed.
Akhlaq: The physician must have humility, tawadhu’u,
show brotherhood, ukhuwwat, and have social respectability, muru’at. The physician must have a balanced
character, tawazun. He must have a sense of accountability, muhasabat.
He must work for the benefit of the patients and the community, maslahat. He should show humility to Allah, to professional
colleagues, to patients and their relatives. He should avoid show-off, riyaa, in
its manifest and hidden forms. Brotherhood is manifested in the humane treatment and respect for all patients regardless of
their disease and social status. The believing physician gives reassurance, empathy, consolation, psychological support for
patients and relatives. He has a positive and optimistic attitude in the stress of illness. He also fulfils the basic duties
of brotherhood with his professional colleagues. Social respectability is acquired by good public behavior and avoiding any
negative behavior that violates this respectability, kharq al muru’at. This should not be a mere show or acting
in public when in private behavior is despicable. It must be sincere and consistent with an overall good behavior.
VALUES
The physician should also follow the following guidelines from the sunnat:
good intentions, avoiding doubtful things, leaving alone matters that do not concern him, loving for others, causing no harm,
giving sincere advice, avoiding the prohibited, doing the enjoined acts, , renouncing greed, avoiding sterile arguments, respect
for life, basing decisions and actions on evidence, following the dictates of conscience, righteous acts, quality work, guarding
the tongue, avoiding anger and rage, respecting transgressing Allah’s limits, consciousness of Allah in all circumstances,
performing good acts to wipe out bad ones, treating people with the best of manners, restraint and modesty, maintaining objectivity,
seeking help from Allah, and avoiding oppression or transgression against others.
MEDICAL DECISIONS
No medical procedures can be carried out without informed consent of the patient except
in cases of legal incompetence. The patient has the purest intentions in decisions in the best interests of his or her life.
Others may have bias their decision-making. The patient must be free and capable of giving informed consent. Informed consent
requires disclosure by the physician, understanding by the patient, voluntariness of the decision, legal competence of the
patient, recommendation of the physician on the best course of action, decision by the patient, and authorization by the patient
to carry out the procedures. The patient is free to male decisions regarding choice of physicians and choice of treatments.
Consent can be by proxy in the form of the patient delegating decision making or by means of a living will.
Valid
consent must be voluntary, informed, and by a person with capacity to consent. It involves explaining the procedure contemplated,
making sure the patient understands, and offering the patient a choice. Consent is limited to what was explained to the patient
except in an emergency. Refusal to consent must be an informed refusal (patient understands what he is doing). Refusal to
consent by a competent adult even if irrational is conclusive and treatment can only be given by permission of the court.
Doubts about consent are resolved in favor of preserving life. Spouses and family members do not have an automatic right to
consent. A spouse cannot overrule the patient’s choice.
Advance
directives, proxy informed consent by the family are made for the unconscious terminal patient on withholding or withdrawal
of treatment. Physician assisted suicide, active euthanasia, and voluntary euthanasia are illegal. A do not resuscitate order
(DNR) by a physician could create legal complications. The living will has the following advantages: (a) reassuring the patient
that terminal care will be carried out as he or she desires (b) providing guidance and legal protection and thus relieving
the physicians of the burden of decision making and legal liabilities (c) relieving the family of the mental stress involved
in making decisions about terminal care. The disadvantage of a living will is that it may not anticipate all developments
of the future thus limiting the options available to the physicians and the family. The device of the power of attorney can
be used instead of the living will or advance directive. Decision by a proxy can work in two ways: (a) decide what the patient
would have decided if able (b) decide in the best interests of the patient. Informed consent is still required for physicians
in special practices such as a ship’s doctor, prison doctor, and doctors in armed forces. Police surgeons may have to
carry out examinations on suspects without informed consent.
CONSENT OF THE INCOMPETENT
Competent
children can consent to treatment but cannot refuse treatment. The consent of one parent is sufficient if the 2 disagree.
Parental choice takes precedence over the child’s choice. Courts can overrule parents. Life-saving treatment of minors
is given even if parents refuse. Parental choice is final in therapeutic or non-therapeutic research on children. Mental patients
cannot consent to treatment, research, or sterilization because of their intellectual incompetence. They are admitted, detained,
and treated voluntarily or involuntarily for their own benefit, in emergencies, for purposes of assessment, if they are a
danger to themselves, or on a court order. Suicidal patients tend to refuse treatment because they want to die. Nutrition,
hydration, and treatment can be withdrawn in a persistent vegetative state since the chance of recovery is low. There is no
moral difference between withholding and withdrawing futile treatment. Labor and delivery are emergencies that require immediate
decisions but the woman may not be competent and proxies are used. Forced medical intervention and ceserian section may be
ordered in the fetal interest. Birth plans can be treated as an advance directive.
DISCLOSURE AND TRUTHFULNESS
As part of the
professional contract between the physician and the patient, the physician must tell the whole truth. Patients have the right
to know the risks and benefits of medical procedure in order for them to make an autonomous informed consent. Deception violates
fidelity. If disclosure will cause harm it is not obligatory. Partial disclosure and white or technical lies are permissible
under necessity. Disclosure to the family and other professionals is allowed if it is necessary for treatment purposes. Physicians
must use their judgment in disclosure of bad news to the patient.
PRIVACY AND CONFIDENTIALITY
Privacy
and confidentiality are often confused. Privacy is the right to make decisions about personal or private matters and blocking
access to private information. The patient voluntarily allows the physician access to private information in the trust that
it will not be disclosed to others. This confidentiality must be maintained within the confines of the Law even after death
of the patient. In routine hospital practice many persons have access to confidential information but all are enjoined to
keep such information confidential. Confidentiality includes medical records of any form. The patient should not make unnecessary
revelation of negative things about himself or herself. The physician can not disclose confidential information to a third
party without the consent of the patient. Information can be released without the consent of the patient for purposes of medical
care, for criminal investigations, and in the public interest. Release is not justified without patient consent for the following
purposes: education, research, medical audit, employment ofr insurance.
FIDELITY The principle of fidelity requires that physicians be faithful to their patients. It includes:
acting in faith, fulfilling agreements, maintaining relations, and fiduciary responsibilities (trust and confidence). It is
not based on a written contract. Abandoning the patient at any stage of treatment without alternative arrangements is a violation
of fidelity. The fidelity obligation may conflict with the obligation to protect third parties by disclosing contagious disease
or dangerous behavior of the patient. The physician may find himself in a situation of divided loyalty between the interests
of the patient and the interests of the institution. The conflict may be between two patients of the physician such as when
maternal and fetal interests conflict. Physicians involved in clinical trials have conflicting dual roles of physicians and
investigators.
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