As per usual, I don’t rate textbook-like books, but this one can get a minor review.
This gave me an even larger appreciation of grey areas tbh. As objective as medicine may seem to some people, it really truly has a great deal of subjectivity. It’s so easy to think that there is a correct way of doing things… but then once you look at it in a more holistic way, you realize that “correct” is not universal. What I got from this was: sometimes there is no correct answer, there is no framework, and you may have to just approach the situation as it unravels, and deal with it on a case-by-case basis. Not to mention that you don’t have to deal with it alone– there is a whole healthcare team that can assist with tackling ethical dilemmas.
I really appreciated the case studies and discussion of them, it allowed for a greater understanding of the various perspectives involved as well as the implication of decisions relating to them (social, ethical, law, cultural… etc). Also the fact that it was very Canadian-specific was a bonus to understanding how various cases were handled and what came from them.
As stressful and daunting as this book can make medicine and healthcare professions sound–with the legal and moral obligations and potential lawsuits–I think that if you go into it with the intention of doing right, with the intention and effort to do what you can for the betterment of each patient, then you will be okay. At the end of the day, you chose this career to help others, and sometimes that form of help looks different depending on the case. As scary as making the wrong decision seems, if you actively put care, effort, and thought into making the decision, with the patient’s health and concerns as a central factor, then I think you did your part as a healthcare professional. (I maybe say this as an affirmation to counter my own worries hahaha.)