Beyond a code of ethics: phenomenological ethics for everyday practice.

Physical therapy, like all health-care professions, governs itself through a code of ethics that defines its obligations of professional behaviours. The code of ethics provides professions with a consistent and common moral language and principled guidelines for ethical actions. Yet, and as argued in this paper, professional codes of ethics have limits applied to ethical decision-making in the presence of ethical dilemmas. Part of the limitations of the codes of ethics is that there is no particular hierarchy of principles that govern in all situations. Instead, the exigencies of clinical practice, the particularities of individual patient's illness experiences and the transformative nature of chronic illnesses and disabilities often obscure the ethical concerns and issues embedded in concrete situations. Consistent with models of expert practice, and with contemporary models of patient-centred care, we advocate and describe in this paper a type of interpretative and narrative approach to moral practice and ethical decision-making based on phenomenology. The tools of phenomenology that are well defined in research are applied and examined in a case that illustrates their use in uncovering the values and ethical concerns of a patient. Based on the deconstruction of this case on a phenomenologist approach, we illustrate how such approaches for ethical understanding can help assist clinicians and educators in applying principles within the context and needs of each patient.

[1]  B. Greenfield The Role of Emotions in Ethical Decision Making: Implications for Physical Therapist Education , 2007 .

[2]  Phenomenology: An Alternative Ethics in Rehabilitation , 2009, American journal of physical medicine & rehabilitation.

[3]  I. Edwards Chapter 10 – Clinical Reasoning and Expert Practice , 2007 .

[4]  H. Triezenberg The identification of ethical issues in physical therapy practice. , 1996, Physical therapy.

[5]  M. Rittman,et al.  Metaphor Shifts in Stroke Recovery , 2007, Health communication.

[6]  Tom L. Beauchamp,et al.  Does Ethical Theory Have a Future in Bioethics? , 2004, The Journal of law, medicine & ethics : a journal of the American Society of Law, Medicine & Ethics.

[7]  R. B. Purtilo,et al.  Thirty-first Mary McMillan lecture. A time to harvest, a time to sow: ethics for a shifting landscape. , 2000, Physical therapy.

[8]  A. Jette Toward a common language for function, disability, and health. , 2006, Physical therapy.

[9]  Amedeo Giorgi The Phenomenological Movement and Research in the Human Sciences , 2005, Nursing science quarterly.

[10]  C. Davis,et al.  Beyond the Code of Ethics: Educating Physical Therapists for Their Role as Moral Agents , 2000 .

[11]  M. E. Daly Towards a phenomenology of caregiving: growth in the caregiver is a vital component. , 1987, Journal of medical ethics.

[12]  M. Schwartz,et al.  Richard Zaner’s Phenomenology of the Clinical Encounter , 2005, Theoretical medicine and bioethics.

[13]  A. Limentani,et al.  The role of ethical principles in health care and the implications for ethical codes. , 1999, Journal of medical ethics.

[14]  R. Barnitt Ethical dilemmas in occupational therapy and physical therapy: a survey of practitioners in the UK National Health Service. , 1998, Journal of medical ethics.

[15]  A. Guccione Ethical Issues in Physical Therapy Practice , 1980 .

[16]  J. Liaschenko,et al.  Nursing ethics and conceptualizations of nursing: profession, practice and work. , 2004, Journal of advanced nursing.

[17]  K. Shepard,et al.  Expert practice in physical therapy. , 2000, Physical therapy.

[18]  W. Branch The Ethics of Caring and Medical Education , 2000, Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges.