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Medical Deontology in Psychiatry During the Early Communist Period in Romania

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2020

S. Hostiuc
Affiliation:
Legal Medicine and Bioethics, University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Carol Davila” Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania
O. Buda
Affiliation:
History of Medicine, University of Medicine and Pharmacy “Carol Davila” Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania

Abstract

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Immediately after the World War Two, Romanian medical deontology in general and Psychiatry deontology in particular suffered a process of dissolution, causing a minimization of the role of the patient and a maximization of the role of the collectivity. This moral dissolution favoured acts of psychiatric abuse, most of them still unknown, against political dissidents, psychiatric patients, or even regular people considered reactionary by the political regime. The basis of medical ethics/deontology was no longer the relation between physician and patient, but between physician and patient as the member of the collectivity. The basis of the medical ethics “must be beforehand the science of the physicians from a social and political point of view". This approach changed numerous paradigms that were present in medical deontology for more than half of century in Romania. The purpose of this presentation is to succinctly present the most important elements of communist medical ethics with applicability in psychiatry, structured on the three main pillars of medical deontology: the relation of the physician with his colleagues, the patient, and society.

Acknowledgment

This work was supported by a grant of the Romanian National Authority for Scientific Research, CNDI– UEFISCDI, PN-II-RU-TE-2012-3-44

Type
Article: 0661
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2015
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