Patient Undone
Professor Deborah Bowman explores how being struck down by serious illness has irrevocably altered her take on medical ethics and what it means to be a patient.
Professor Deborah Bowman reveals how a diagnosis of cancer has transformed her view of medical ethics and what it means to be a patient.
As Professor of Ethics and Law at St George's, University of London, Deborah has spent the past two decades teaching and writing about medical ethics, the moral principles that apply to medicine.
Itβs taken her down countless hospital corridors, to the clinics and the wards where medical ethics plays out in practice, behind closed doors, supporting healthcare practitioners and their patients to negotiate uncertainty and conflict.
This is the field of clinical ethics and, each time, the βpatientβ has been central to her response.
Yet in the autumn of 2017, everything changed. Deborah was diagnosed with breast cancer and it signalled the beginning of her undoing, not just personally but professionally too, playing havoc with what she thought she knew about clinical ethics.
Patient autonomy - literally βself-ruleβ- is one of its cornerstones - a patientβs right to make decisions about their healthcare. So what does autonomy mean if the βselfβ, she thought she knew, was so changeable and confusing?
Deborah returns to the Royal Marsden Hospital where she is a patient, to explore this - with both her personal and professional hats on.
Producer: Beth Eastwood
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Broadcasts
- Tue 16 Apr 2019 11:00ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
- Mon 22 Apr 2019 21:00ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4