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Do no harm: is it time to rethink the H ippocratic O ath?
Author(s) -
Walton Merrilyn,
Kerridge Ian
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
medical education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.776
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1365-2923
pISSN - 0308-0110
DOI - 10.1111/medu.12275
Subject(s) - hippocratic oath , oath , context (archaeology) , health care , harm , medicine , beneficence , law , sociology , public relations , political science , history , autonomy , archaeology
Introduction The 1964 revision of the H ippocratic O ath addressed the disconnection in language and context between the classical doctrine and 20th century medicine. Now, 50 years later, we argue that any revision of the O ath must be responsive to the significant social, technical and political changes that have occurred in health care. The context for the Hippocratic Oath This paper examines the ways in which health care and the health professions have changed over the last half‐century and describes a range of environmental and contextual features that expose the inadequacies of the 1964 O ath in the worlds of today and the future. We note the constancy of the doctor–patient dyad in contemporary ethical codes and consider from the perspective of patient safety those aspects of care that might fall short of the optimum if the focus on the doctor is retained. We ask whether there is any merit in maintaining a focus on the ethics or professionalism of doctors, or whether more of our attention should be directed towards the ethics of health care itself. Conclusions Patient safety is widely acknowledged as a major health issue. Being open about the interdependency of doctors, the complex socio‐political nature of health care, and the inevitability of errors and adverse events need not challenge the authority of the doctor. Rather, openness about both the ways in which medicine has changed and the harms that doctors may (inadvertently) cause might afford medicine the opportunity to build a different relationship with patients (and with society more broadly), that recognises complexity, human fallibility and the uncertainty of medicine.

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