Abstract
The passage from a posture of clinician to that of clinician–bioethicist poses significant challenges for health professionals, most notably with regards to theoretical or epistemological views of complex ethical impasses encountered in clinical settings. Apprehending these situations from the only clinical perspective of the nurse or the doctor, for example, can be very unproductive to help solve this kind of situation and certainly poses great limits to the role of the clinician–bioethicist. Drawing on my own experience as a former nurse who, following graduate studies in bioethics has begun providing ethics consultation services, I argue that clinicians must undergo an epistemological transformation in order to become clinician–bioethicists. A source of inspiration or framework for would-be clinician–bioethicists is, I suggest, the “Petite éthique” developed by the contemporary French philosopher Paul Ricoeur. Specifically, clinician–bioethicists should develop specific core ethical competencies (in line with the conclusions of the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities (Core competencies for health care ethics consultation, 1998); namely: savoir or knowing, savoir faire or knowing how to do, and savoir être or knowing how to be.
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Notes
This experience happened at the beginning of a clinical ethics mentorship with a senior clinical ethicist, and took place in three different health care institutions in which I was involved for more than a year and a half.
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Acknowledgments
I would like to express gratitude to Dr. Bryn Williams-Jones for his in depth revision, comments, support and discussion that have improved this manuscript over the course of its development. I also would like to thank Dr. Marie-Ève Bouthillier for her feedback on a preliminary version of this paper and for the opportunity of rich discussions about clinical practice. I finally would like to thank Jocelyne Chicoine for all her editorial support throughout the process.
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Potvin, MJ. Ricoeur’s “Petite éthique”: An Ethical Epistemological Perspective for Clinician–Bioethicists. HEC Forum 22, 311–326 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10730-010-9146-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10730-010-9146-1