Abstract:
Modern health care systems, both at the policy as well as the delivery level, are
becoming increasingly data-dependent. The profession of Medical Informatics is beginning
to emerge as a distinctive discipline that functions as the point of entry of the
relevant data into the systems and as the medium of their manipulation. Medical Informatics
therefore finds itself in a gate-keeper position: i. e., in the position of someone
who effectively controls the use of these data and whose actions set the parameters
of what will be done with them. This position, in turn, places special ethical obligations
on the profession as a whole as well as on the individual professionals. It is unlikely
that the nature of these obligations, or indeed their very scope, will be appreciated
without some training in ethics; and it is also unlikely that the ethical problems
that arise in the conduct of the profession can be handled smoothly without some ethical
education. Medical Informatics, as a profession, should therefore insist that the
education of its members involve not only technical parameters but also include some
education in ethics. The pay-off for this would come not only in terms of an integrated
functioning of the profession as a whole, but also in a much more firmly established
legal and social position.
Key-Words:
Professional Ethics - Computing Milieu - Legal Issues - Patient Data Privacy - Curriculum