rss
Med Humanities 2002;28:19-22 doi:10.1136/mh.28.1.19
  • Original article

Medical facilities as moral worlds

  1. L Turner
  1. Biomedical Ethics Unit and Department of Social Studies of Medice, McGill University, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  1. Correspondence to:
 Dr L Turner, 3647 Peel Street, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 1X1;
 leigh.turner{at}mcgill.ca
  • Accepted 23 January 2002
  • Revised 26 November 2001

Abstract

Bioethics is dominated by an emphasis on rule making and quandary solving. Teaching and research in ethics often focuses upon dramatic, controversial issues at the margins of life and death. Much less attention is given to the relationship between moral reflection and the ethos of place. Medical facilities, however, are moral worlds. To discuss the ethos of place is to focus on the character or atmosphere of particular dwellings. Architecture, interior design, and the creation of built environments have moral, spiritual, and aesthetic dimensions. Discussions of “ethics” need to be less oriented to rules and dilemmas, and more attuned to practical matters of everyday social experience. Instead of developing all-encompassing critiques of medical facilities as impersonal, alienating institutions, scholars from various fields need to explore the incremental steps that can make particular settings more decent, humane, and caring.

Footnotes

    Register for free content

    The full back archive is now available for all BMJ Journals. Institutional subscribers may access the entire archive as part of their subscription. Personal subscribers will also have access to all content when logged in. Non-subscribers who register have free access to all articles published before 2006 right back to volume 1 issue 1. Register here to access the free archive of all BMJ Journals.

    Don't forget to sign up for content alerts so you keep up to date with all the articles as they are published.