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DOI: 10.1055/s-2003-41586
Recommendations of the ESGE Workshop on Ethics in Teaching and Learning Endoscopy
First European Symposium on Ethics in Gastroenterology and Digestive Endoscopy, Kos, Greece, June 2003Publication History
Publication Date:
20 August 2003 (online)
Introduction
The ethical implications of teaching and training in gastrointestinal endoscopy can be derived from the basic principle of Hippocrates: ”to help or at least not to harm”. The goal of ethical teaching can be summarized as follows:
To train endoscopists to a high level of expertise in a way that does not harm patients and exposes patients to training in a fair way and respects their right to self-determination.
While these statements are easily agreed upon, training raises a variety of ethical considerations and dilemmas, the most obvious being: how can we justify exposing patients to a trainee, when the doctor as well as the patient may appreciate that a procedure performed by a trainee may be of a quality inferior to that performed by a fully trained expert?
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L. Aabakken, MD. Chief of GI Endoscopy
Department of Medicine · Rikshospitalet University Hospital
0027 Oslo · Norway
Fax: +47-2307-2008
Email: larsaa@klinmed.uio.no