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https://studentshare.org/miscellaneous/1651848-moral-problems-in-our-professional-lives.
MORAL PROBLEMS IN OUR PROFESSIONAL LIVES [Pick the How to Adapt and Catalyze change? Lives today are chaotic, what is right for me isn’t necessarily right for you. Our mental faculties, like the ability to frame the present depend on being reasonably reminiscent about the past and able to logically imagine the future, shape up the paradigm of morality. This inherent sense of good and the bad differs from person to person. But with today’s distortion it is more likely your eyes go fishing but the rest of your body suffers in vain holding a cell phone, typing on a keyboard or maybe holding a cordless to your ear, all the while procrastinating.
The capacities are devoid of reason. For what it’s worth, lives are highly out of balance. This is the tantamount behind psychological upheavals contributing to a disrupted professional and personal life. Ethical issues, work pressure, inefficient management moreover because of an amalgamation of private and work life, a meshwork is created, a maze from which one comes out all weary and worn unable to cope with their surroundings. I don’t think believing that, “our fatigue is often caused not by work, but by worry, frustration, and resentment” (Carnegie, 2010) will be moot; for contributing to these mere problems are the Gorgonzolas of corrupted ethics.
Being a radiology technologist is no short of facing and being a part of such ethical disturbances. A common situation that is witnessed in radiology department relates to disclosure of errors before the patients. It is quite common that serious diagnoses are missed even by leading physicians. This poses a challenge, not only for the working physicians but also for the staff working in the radiology department; since it is extremely difficult to convince a patient who has lost trust in his physician’s skills.
Diagnoses if missed are likely to put the life of the patient at risk, and it is quite often seen that patients adopt the channel of litigation to gain financial compensations, in case a physician misses a diagnosis by mistake. There is no doubt that human life is the most precious thing; but at the same time, it is also true that humans are prone to committing mistakes. Although this type of error is not an error of commission; the consequences of this error may however be drastic not only for the patient but also for the physician.
In my opinion, physicians who omit a diagnosis during an early consultation, but are ready to disclose their errors before their patient during a subsequent encounter, should be given immunity from the usual penalties that are imposed by legal institutions in this regard. Doing this will not only allow the physicians to take corrective measures but will also provide them heightened level of protection from undue litigation. This will also allow the patients an opportunity to learn about their disease earlier than before; since it is possible that physicians presently hide their errors due to the prevailing circumstances, in which they consider themselves extremely vulnerable due to the associated legal complications.
ReferencesCarnegie, D. (2010). How to enjoy your life and your job. Simon and Schuster.
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