hp_mast_wide

Briefing - Do Doctors Need Spirituality?

May-June 2006

"Thank God for you," people often tell Marilyn "Mimi" Pattison, MD, a hospice physician. They mean they are glad that someone is willing to provide care for seriously ill people, because they fear they couldn't do it themselves. What Pattison thinks, although she doesn't say it out loud, is, "Thank God I have found this work."

The title of Pattison's article, "Finding Peace and Joy in the Practice of Medicine" (p. 22), might serve as the overall banner for this issue's special section on physicians and spirituality. Kim Van Oosten, a CHA communications specialist, has brought together a group of writers who believe that spirituality, far from being made obsolescent by medical science, remains a crucial component of it. We think you'll enjoy reading what they have to say.

Genomics and the Developing World
Like other health care media, Health Progress has in recent years published a number of articles concerning ethical issues raised by the new science of genomics. Often the issue is access to genetic medicine. Won't such medicine, being expensive, be limited to rich people? How can it be administered justly?

"Justice and Genetics: Whose Holy Grail?" by Maura Ryan, Ph.D. (p. 46), examines the problem on an international scale. Health care disparities in the United States are relatively slight when compared to those between developed and developing nations. Noting that a single diagnostic test for susceptibility to disease can run into the thousands of dollars, Ryan asks what relevance such a test might have for, say, the Democratic Republic of the Congo which in 2002 spent an average $15 for medical care for each of its citizens.

Ryan is associate professor of Christian ethics, University of Notre Dame, Note Dame, IN. Her article is the second in Health Progress's new series "Social Justice and Catholic Health Care."

Copyright © 2006 by the Catholic Health Association of the United States
For reprint permission, contact Betty Crosby or call (314) 253-3477.

Briefing - Do Doctors Need Spirituality?

Copyright © 2006 by the Catholic Health Association of the United States

For reprint permission, contact Betty Crosby or call (314) 253-3490.