Medical students main motivation is to help people – yet
Authors:
E. Křížová
Authors‘ workplace:
Přednosta: PhDr. Ingrid Strobachová, PhD.
; 2. lékařská fakulta
; Ústav lékařské etiky a humanitních základů medicíny
; Univerzita Karlova v Praze
Published in:
Prakt. Lék. 2016; 96(2): 88-90
Category:
Of different specialties
Overview
The article reminds us of the collectivity or service orientation being the fundamental element of the professional medical role. Traditional wordings representing medicine as a helping and altruistic profession have been largely discredited. Medical ethos has continually transformed from the explicitly declared ideals to rather implicit moral contents. This, however, can lead to a further decrease of morally relevant imperatives in the framework of market society. The article presents empirical results of a survey among 1st year medical students. In their view, the main motivation why they opted for medicine was to help other people. Motivations oriented to self-interest and personal needs have also been widely present and we consider them as a visible counterbalance of altruistic motifs. The discussion is if medical altruism is sustainable in market societies and highly efficient health care systems.
Keywords:
medical profession – ethics – altruism – motivation
Sources
1. Glannon W, Roos LF. Are doctors altruistic? J Med Ethics 2002; 28: 68–69.
2. Parsons T. Social structure and dynamic process: The case of modern medical practice. In Parsons, T. The Social System. New York: The Free Press of Glencoe 1951; 429–479.
3. Wolfson RJ. Declining altruism in medicine. BMJ 2002; 324(7338): 624–625.
Labels
General practitioner for children and adolescents General practitioner for adultsArticle was published in
General Practitioner
2016 Issue 2
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