Helping Children Hurt Themselves: Why Pediatricians Ought to Support Adolescent Football Players in Their Athletic Goals.

Q3 Medicine
Journal of Clinical Ethics Pub Date : 2020-01-01
Ruth Tallman
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Participation in sports such as football puts youth-athletes at high risk of injury. Helmets cannot protect players from the possibility of traumatic brain injury, and repeated concussive injuries can lead to chronic traumatic encephalopathy later in life. In light of such facts, the morally appropriate role of physicians who treat patient-athletes comes into question. I argue that pediatricians ought to be committed to a high level of shared decision making, whereby their goal, rather than being to provide the medically best advice (which, let's be honest, would be to not play football at all), would be to provide the medically best advice in light of patients' honestly professed plans and goals. If patient-athletes see their doctor as an ally, who wants them on the field as much as they want to be there, they will be more likely to trust their pediatrician to help in the realization of those goals, even if they report an injury. While this approach could feel like a medical betrayal, in that the physician could feel complicit in helping a patient to continue engaging in high-risk behavior, I argue that medical outcomes will be better than if patient-athletes see physicians as an obstruction to their athletic goals.

帮助孩子伤害自己:为什么儿科医生应该支持青少年足球运动员的运动目标。
参加像足球这样的运动使青少年运动员有很高的受伤风险。头盔不能保护球员免受创伤性脑损伤的可能性,反复的脑震荡会导致以后的慢性创伤性脑病。鉴于这些事实,治疗运动员病人的医生在道德上是否合适就受到了质疑。我认为儿科医生应该致力于高水平的共同决策,因此他们的目标,而不是提供医学上最好的建议(老实说,这就意味着根本不踢足球),而是根据患者诚实宣称的计划和目标,提供医学上最好的建议。如果病人运动员把他们的医生视为盟友,像他们一样希望他们上场,他们就更有可能相信他们的儿科医生能帮助他们实现这些目标,即使他们报告了受伤。虽然这种方法可能会让人感觉像是医学上的背叛,因为医生可能会觉得在帮助病人继续从事高风险行为方面是同谋,但我认为,如果病人-运动员将医生视为阻碍他们运动目标的障碍,那么医疗结果将会更好。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Clinical Ethics
Journal of Clinical Ethics Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
31
期刊介绍: The Journal of Clinical Ethics is written for and by physicians, nurses, attorneys, clergy, ethicists, and others whose decisions directly affect patients. More than 70 percent of the articles are authored or co-authored by physicians. JCE is a double-blinded, peer-reviewed journal indexed in PubMed, Current Contents/Social & Behavioral Sciences, the Cumulative Index to Nursing & Allied Health Literature, and other indexes.
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