Physical Therapist Ethical Dilemma

1430 Words3 Pages

Introduction

For over 75 years the profession of physical therapy has required it's members to adhere to a standard of ethical behavior.1 The first Code of Ethics adopted by the American Physiotherapy Association in 1935 focused mainly on the relationship between the physical therapist (PT), referring physician, and the disciplinary actions of violating that relationship.2(p.4) Since then the Code of Ethics has evolved into what the American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) refers to as the Code of Ethics for the Physical Therapist (PT Code), and the Standards of Ethical Conduct for the Physical Therapist Assistant (PTA Standards).2(p.5),3,4 Today the Code and Standards are designed around the association's core set of values to help define the ethical standards and obligations of the PT and physical therapist assistant (PTA), and to act as reference for situations of ethical dilemmas.3,4

The ethical dilemma is defined as "a conflict of values where each value action is seen to be equally bad or good, and to act on one value cancels out the other so that you can't have it both ways."5(p.1333) In the United States a common cause of the ethical dilemma is rationing of health care and forced allocation of resources.6 Health care rationing is often thought of as the denial of necessary care, or the utilization of lower quality health care in place of more costly but superior alternatives. However, health care rationing is better defined as the equitable and mindful disbursement of a scarce supply of necessary resources.7(p.151) It is my opinion that in order to achieve the best outcome in ethical dilemmas involving health care rationing, one must apply a needs based distribution of justice reasoning and consider the bi...

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8. Nalette E. Constrained physical therapist practice: an ethical case analysis of recommending discharge placement from the acute care setting. Phys Ther. 2010;90(6):939-952. doi:10.2522/ptj.20050399.

9. Swisher LL, Arslanian LE, Davis CM. The realm-individual process-situation (RIPS) model of ethical decision making. Published by: APTA Section on Health Policy & Administration. Vol. 5 No. 3. October 2005. Available at: http://www.apta.org/uploadedFiles/APTAorg/Practice_and_Patient_Care/Ethics/Tools/RIPS_DecisionMaking.pdf. Accessed on: March 22, 2014.

10. Edwards I, Delany CM, Townsend AF, Swisher LL. New perspectives on the theory of justice: implications for physical therapy ethics and clinical practice. Phys Ther. 2011;91:1642–1652. doi:10.2522/ptj.20100351.10

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