Published in:
01-08-2003 | World Progress in Surgery
The Surgeon and Human Immunodeficiency Virus
Authors:
Jens Mielke, M.B.Ch.B., M.H.S.C., Kazadi K.N. Kalangu, M.D.
Published in:
World Journal of Surgery
|
Issue 8/2003
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Abstract
The moral dilemmas faced by surgeons worldwide who treat patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) can be viewed against the background of experience in sub-Saharan countries, where the community prevalence is in excess of 25% (90% of hospital inpatients). When seeking consent for an HIV test before surgery, frank communication regarding the surgeons’ perspective of risks to themselves and the patient is helpful. When consent for a test must be obtained from a substitute decision-maker, the surgeon should consider if the patient would want the decision-maker to know the result. Understanding the natural history of HIV in the surgical setting can help deal with the uncertainties encountered and should be a research priority for developing countries. International professional organizations are useful platforms for the exchange of ideas when surgeons encounter uncertainty by increasing access to journals and creating opportunities for discussion. Although supervisory bodies in some parts of the world prevent HIV-infected surgeons from putting patients at risk by offering surgery, the withdrawal of their services in developing countries can cause more harm than good. Surgeons in that position may be entitled to offer surgery but only with full disclosure of the risk of HIV infection to the patient. The decision-making process known as ”accountability for reasonableness” allows surgeons to determine fairness, legitimacy, and acceptability when making resource allocation decisions involving patients with HIV.