Blind Trust in the Care-Giver: Is Paternalism Essential to the Health-Seeking Behavior of Patients in Sub-Saharan Africa?
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Affiliation(s)
1School of Public Health, (Hoehoe Campus) University of Health and Allied Sciences, Ho, Ghana.
2Institute for Security, Disaster and Emergency Studies, Accra, Ghana.
2Institute for Security, Disaster and Emergency Studies, Accra, Ghana.
ABSTRACT
In
the past, patients put their lives in the care of doctors in blind
trust that the doctors would care for them. This kind of trust is no
longer common particularly in the western industrialized nations but the
same cannot be said about patients in Ghana and Sub-Sahara Africa. The
first concern was whether paternalism was essential in medical practice
in Ghana. The second was whether paternalism as an ethical standard
should be considered from the ethical lens of the western industrialized
nations, rather than from the African cultural context. This entailed a
review and examination of the literature on paternalism. We searched
databases such as PubMed, Medline and others for reports, editorials and
published papers in the English Language. A search on Goggle Scholar on
“paternalism in medical practice in Africa” yielded over 380,000
entries and “paternalism in medical practice in Ghana” yielded 2.1
million but more than 99% were not relevant in each instant. Hand
searching of selected printed journals and grey literature such as
technical reports, conference proceedings and workshops were also
assessed. The studies that met the inclusion criteria were given
additional review but those with poor methodology were excluded but
discussed in this review. I assigned an overall score and identified the
position taken in the publication or report in relation to the
objectives and rated them objectively. The papers that received scores
above 2.5 out of 4 in the evaluation were further analyzed. I summarized
the findings into their respective units, and interpreted them based
upon my skills, knowledge and specialization in medico-legal ethics,
public health and law. The result shows that not enough research has
been done on whether or not paternalism should be encouraged as a
regular feature of medical practice in Ghana due to the lack of
education. It also shows that paternalism enhances the health seeking
behavior of patients despite developments on patient autonomy and
capacity. Where the average patient is illiterate in general and in
medical matters, the paternalism of the physician may be inevitable.
Ethical standards such as Informed Consent, Autonomy, Due Process,
Benevolence and No malfeasance should be defined and operationalized in
clinical practice within the cultural context of Sub-Sahara Africa. A
systematic indigenization of medico-legal ethical concerns in medical
practice is needed in Ghana.
Cite this paper
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the Health-Seeking Behavior of Patients in Sub-Saharan Africa?. Advances in Applied Sociology, 5, 94-104. doi: 10.4236/aasoci.2015.52008.
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