Ensuring Ethical Medical Practice in the UAE with Guidelines

By Danélia Botes

August 29, 2024

Introduction

The UAE’s healthcare sector is renowned for its high standards and commitment to patient care. Integral to achieving these standards are the ethical guidelines that healthcare professionals (HCPs) must follow. These guidelines ensure that medical practices are conducted with integrity, compassion, and respect for patients’ rights. The Department of Health – Abu Dhabi (DoH), has published a comprehensive Healthcare Workforce Bioethics Guidelines describing the core principles of medical ethics in the UAE, providing a detailed understanding of how these principles guide HCPs in their daily practice.

Core Principles of Medical Ethics: Respect for Autonomy

Respect for autonomy is fundamental in medical ethics. This principle emphasises patients’ rights to make informed decisions about their healthcare. HCPs must provide patients with all necessary information to make uncoerced choices regarding their treatment. This includes the right to accept or refuse care. In practice, this means evaluating patients’ decisional capacity, which involves their ability to understand, appreciate, reason, and communicate their choices. This assessment should be iterative, as a patient’s clinical status may change over time.

Beneficence, Justice, and Equity

The principles of beneficence and non-maleficence are crucial in guiding HCPs to act in the best interest of patients. Beneficence involves maximising benefits and promoting overall well-being, while non-maleficence focuses on avoiding harm. These principles require HCPs to carefully consider the potential outcomes of medical interventions, striving to minimise suffering and adverse effects.

Justice in healthcare involves ensuring fairness and equity in the distribution of resources and access to services. HCPs must promote healthcare access for all individuals, regardless of their background or position. This principle is particularly important in the UAE, where HCPs care for patients from diverse cultural backgrounds. Ensuring equity in healthcare requires a commitment to providing collaborative, respectful, and up-to-date care.

Decision-Making in Medical Practice

HCPs should approach patients with the presumption that they have the capacity to make their own choices. However, certain circumstances and diseases may impair this capacity. In such cases, alternative decision-makers may be involved. These decision-makers are usually close relatives, and their role is to make healthcare choices on behalf of the patient. HCPs should guide these decision-makers to make decisions based on the patient’s known values and preferences.

When patients lack decisional capacity and have not designated an alternative decision-maker, HCPs should seek consent from a relative. The order of priority for relatives is specified by UAE law. If there is disagreement among decision-makers or between them and the clinical team, ethics committees can provide guidance. These committees are multidisciplinary and include clinicians, ethicists, social workers, and legal counsel, among others.

The Role of Telehealth: Digital Health and Telemedicine

The rise of digital health and telemedicine has transformed healthcare delivery. These technologies improve efficiency, access, and cost-effectiveness. However, they also pose new ethical challenges, particularly regarding confidentiality and privacy. HCPs must adhere to standards issued by Shafafiya and the Malaffi database, ensuring that digital health tools are used ethically.

Confidentiality is paramount in telehealth services. HCPs must conduct telehealth consultations in private locations and protect patient information. They need to inform patients about the limitations of telehealth in comparison to face-to-face meetings. HCPs should also guide patients on arranging necessary follow-up care. When using innovative interventions, HCPs should de-identify patient data to ensure privacy. They need to establish transparent procedures for storing, sharing, and accessing data. 

HCPs should also educate patients on how to protect their data.

Ethical Considerations in Medical Innovation

Medical innovation is a driving force behind advancements in healthcare, offering new treatments, technologies, and approaches that can significantly improve patient outcomes. In the UAE, the integration of innovative practices is guided by ethical principles to ensure patient safety and efficacy. These innovations range from non-standard treatments aimed at individual patient well-being to scientific changes based on rigorous research. Informed consent is critical when introducing innovative medical interventions. Patients or their decision-makers must be fully informed about the nature, purpose, risks, benefits, and alternatives of any innovative treatment. This process should be culturally appropriate, considering language, religious beliefs, and health literacy.

Conclusion

The ethical guidelines for medical practice in the UAE are designed to ensure high-quality, safe, and equitable healthcare. By adhering to principles of autonomy, beneficence, non-maleficence, and justice, HCPs can navigate complex ethical dilemmas and provide the best possible care for their patients. These guidelines are not exhaustive but provide a framework for ethical decision-making in various clinical scenarios. HCPs should always seek legal guidance when necessary and consult ethics committees for complex cases.

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