Must we remain blind to the need for clinical ethics support services in Africa? Eyes on Nigeria.

Onochie Okoye, Nkechi Uche, Nkiruka Uzokwe, Rich Umeh
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Abstract

Hospitals and healthcare workers in Africa, and Nigeria specifically, are increasingly being confronted by complex situations, in which decision-making becomes more troublesome in the presence of conflicting goals, values, and preferences among the respective stakeholders. Given that all healthcare decision-making requires ethical considerations, and there is a noted absence or paucity of documentation of institutionalized mechanisms for addressing any associated concern or dilemma in Nigeria, it is thus unclear how most hospitals, healthcare workers, and the public handle the ethical dimensions of patients' care and hospital practice, while also generating possibilities for improvement in care quality. This paper is an attempt to heighten awareness of the need for clinical ethics support services (CESS) in Nigeria and encourage thought, reflection and dialogue over the issues raised. The authors, drawing from their experiences as practicing bioethicists and health care professionals, as well as findings from an unpublished exploratory qualitative study and a review of literature, posit that Nigeria is ripe for the formalization of CESS, especially at the tertiary level of care. Based on the identified bioethics manpower capacity and societal utilization of the existing telecommunication infrastructure in Nigeria, we propose the establishment of a homegrown and socially responsive pilot initiative in which, on-site hospital ethics support services, as well as a web/portal-based or online component will be accessible to all interested healthcare professionals/students, patients, bioethicists, and members of the public. Though the evidence for the effectiveness and impact of CESS and related services on the quality and outcome of care has remained relatively weak and there is no single existing CESS model that has been comprehensively proven to be beneficial to healthcare practice in all settings, we argue that the establishment of formal and homegrown CESS should be of top priority in Nigeria, and Africa generally.

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我们必须继续无视非洲对临床伦理支持服务的需求吗?关注尼日利亚。
非洲,特别是尼日利亚的医院和医护人员越来越多地面临复杂的情况,在这种情况下,如果各利益相关方的目标、价值观和偏好发生冲突,决策就会变得更加棘手。鉴于所有医疗决策都需要考虑伦理因素,而在尼日利亚,解决任何相关问题或困境的制度化机制文件明显缺乏或很少,因此,大多数医院、医护人员和公众都不清楚如何处理患者护理和医院实践中的伦理问题,同时也不清楚如何提高护理质量。本文试图提高人们对尼日利亚临床伦理支持服务(CESS)必要性的认识,并鼓励人们对所提出的问题进行思考、反省和对话。作者根据自己作为生物伦理学家和医疗保健专业人员的实践经验,以及一项未发表的探索性定性研究和文献综述的结果,认为尼日利亚将临床伦理支持服务正规化的时机已经成熟,尤其是在三级医疗机构。根据已确定的尼日利亚生物伦理方面的人力资源能力和对现有电信基础设施的社会利用情况,我们建议建立一个本土的、具有社会响应性的试点项目,在该项目中,所有感兴趣的医护专业人员/学生、病人、生物伦理学家和公众都可以获得现场医院伦理支持服务,以及基于网络/门户网站的在线服务。尽管关于医院伦理支持服务及相关服务对医疗质量和结果的有效性和影响的证据仍然相对薄弱,而且也没有任何一种现有的医院伦理支持服务模式已被全面证明有利于所有环境下的医疗实践,但我们认为,在尼日利亚乃至整个非洲,建立正式的、本土的医院伦理支持服务应是重中之重。
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