Complexities in medical care and technology often drive patients and caregivers towards issues of great ethical challenge. In the face of complex and challenging situations, healthcare ethics asks the question, “What is the right thing to do?” In this course, participants will gain a basic understanding of the fundamental pillars of heathcare ethics while also engaging the historical, biblical, and contemporary ethical theories and frameworks which give shape to healthcare ethics. Through the engagement of relevant reading and lectures as well as robust discussion of ethical cases and current events, students will be able to apply these theories to the practical challenges of today’s healthcare system and help guide others to make quality healthcare decisions.
Any minister, lay leader, or mission minded believer engaging persons within the healthcare system will inevitably be asked to offer guidance for persons facing complex medical decisions. Those within the medical profession seeking to live out a missional calling through their work would benefit from a structured and guided engagement of issues within healthcare. These are often touched upon in medical and nursing training, and most medical providers are drawn to courses like this after they have gained some experienced in healthcare.
Ethics in healthcare is a “hot topic.” The pillars of ethics and ethical theories flow largely out of religious thought and tradition. Secular institutions in the healthcare setting are continually wrestling with ethical issues, and they are actually wrestling with ideas that have long been explored in the Christian faith. It would benefit the larger mission of God for mission-minded individuals with training in healthcare ethics to be sitting on ethics committees and acting as an influential voice to the ever-changing landscape of healthcare.
Healthcare theories abound, but not all have a biblical basis. This course could help develop biblically-educated healthcare providers and caregivers in the world of complex medical environment.
If healthcare workers desire to live out their missional calling in the healthcare field, they will desire to guide and shape their colleagues and institutions to act more ethically.
The healthcare field is a unique ministry context, and a course on healthcare ethics would help caregivers apply broader biblical principles to specific healthcare issues.
A large part of healthcare ethics tends to the issues of culture and equity. Healthcare values can change among differing cultures. Ethics takes this into account.
Ethics asks, what is the right thing to do? It is very practical. Students will develop the skills to ask the right question for the right context.
Ethics cannot be applied without a case or situation. Learners would bring their cases to the table for discussion and learning and return to their practice with the benefit of that learning.