Saturday, December 30, 2017

OB/GYN Ethics 301

In OB/GYN Ethics 101 I went over topics for medical students, residents rotating through OB/GYN settings, and OB/GYN interns. In OB/GYN Ethics 201 I reviewed topics for OB/GYN residents in generalist settings. Now I need to review a few subspecialty concerns with a fine-toothed comb, especially those not focused on pregnancy and maternal/fetal vital conflicts.

Please remember that I'm not a moral theologian. I'm one resident talking to another, and I am happy to engage in discussion and to retract whatever is in conflict with Church teaching.

REI

Img credit: RWJMS IVF Program, Wikimedia commons.
As in OB/GYN 101, observation of almost everything is okay. Observing gives you a better ability to talk to non-healthcare practitioners (e.g. patients, parishioners, priests, even ethicists) about things they may never see.

You can participate in and perform follicle scans, simple procedures such as transvaginal cyst drainage, medical management with provera (or other progestins), letrozole (or other aromatase inhibitors) clomid (clomiphene), follistim (urofollitropin), trigger shots (b-hCG), GnRH pumps, and anything else that won't have post-fertilization side effects.

You can participate in prenatal genetic diagnosis (or screening) with great caution. PGD is a biopsy of a large percentage of a human embryo's body; it's a significant procedure for that little person, but in itself it's a biopsy, not an act of killing or mutilation. If you know or suspect that the embryo being tested may be rejected (destroyed or cryopreserved), this may be proximate cooperation in evil and you may incur some of the guilt in that act. It's rare that the embryologist would let you do this, anyway.

You can observe but not participate in semen washing, egg harvests, and intrauterine insemination (IUI). These replace or interrupt intermediate steps in sex (semen washing replaces filtering and capacitation of sperm; egg harvest interrupts local motion of eggs; and IUIs replace local motion of sperm after ejaculation. (To clarify for those who have done bench research: semen washing of animal samples or of human samples intended for research does not carry the same gravity, even if the human samples were obtained through masturbation. The participation in masturbation is remote, mediate, material cooperation in the evil and does not confer guilt in the act.)

Family balancing by selecting embryos after prenatal genetic diagnosis is immoral; family balancing that includes embryo destruction is gravely immoral. Selective reduction is gravely immoral. Avoid witnessing destruction of embryos or selective reduction. Counsel against selective reduction.

The standard of care is now clomid/IUI for unexplained infertility, followed by homologous or heterologous IVF with embryo transfer (ET) if that doesn't work. But you'll find a lot of acronyms in Catholic bioethical literature. These are mostly from the early days of IVF when people were attempting to find techniques that boosted success rates. Eventually, REIs and ASRM realized that IVF/ET was easier and nothing else made a difference, except for ICSI (see below). Bearing that in mind, here is a quick list of acronyms, defnitions, and comments that you might encounter from bioethicists:
  • GIFT/TOTS: gamete intra-fallopian tube transfer, not permissible because it replaces the marital act, if sex is every involved (e.g. by collecting sperm in a perforated condom) it is only accidental
  • ZIFT: zygote intra-fallopian tube transfer, ethically analogous to ET, which transfers an embryo into the uterus (see below)
  • LTOT: low tubal ovum transfer, moving an egg from the ovary to the isthmus of the fallopian tube or even to the uterus, without removing it from the body is LICIT when there is intention of fertilizing it with an act of intercourse and not IUI.

Img credit: RWJMS IVF Program, Wikimedia commons.
Intracellular sperm injection (ICSI) injects a sperm directly into an oocyte (see left). It's used for very abnormal or poorly motile sperm and low sperm count. It replaces part of the sexual act and is not licit; do not participate, although you may observe.

Embryo transfer is a slightly hot topic within bioethics. However, I don't see it as that contentious. Fertilization has already occurred, and the sex act has been totally replaced. The local motion of the embryo into the uterus is actually a step in gestation. It seems that ET, therefore, is not illicit and you should actually rejoice that an embryo is being given its rightful place instead of being condemned to that "absurd fate" of cryopreservation.

INVOcell is a new technology being marketed as "mini-IVF," and it basically replaces the embryology lab with a small plastic capsule carried inside the patient's vagina during a several-day incubation period. This conserves funds used to pay an embryologist, maintain sophisticated lab incubators, and maintain multiple federal standards. INVOcell still involves removal of the egg from the patient or use of a frozen egg, masturbation or sperm donation, fertilization outside the body, and ET. It can still involve PGD and embryo destruction or cryopreservation. Treat INVOcell as you would IVF.

Third party reproduction is use of a gestational carrier or use of donated gametes. As a trainee, there is little to nothing you can do about it, as most couples will come to their REI already with a gestational carrier in mind or will elect to use donated gametes without your counseling. If offered the opportunity to counsel on third party reproduction (especially gestational carriers), offer the patient the complex legal truths surrounding these entities, and recommend they speak to a lawyer, to trusted friends and spiritual leaders, and to seriously consider the possibility of adoption.

Transgender medicine is a misguided effort to alleviate real suffering that individuals feel due to a mismatch between their phenotypic sex and their psychological perception of their gender. Hormonal treatment in these cases, like in cases of fertile women seeking contraception, is manipulation of a healthy organ and not medicine. Surgical transition is mutilation of healthy organs. Do not participate.

Sexual Health

There is a lot of material in treatment of orgasmic disorders that amounts to pornography and masturbation. You may teach a woman the location of her own organs with diagrams and even with a mirror, but be very careful to maintain clinical professionalism and (obviously) always have a chaperone in the room. You may explain the function of these organs and how women experience orgasm (including how they experience it differently). With the magnificent teachings of the theology of the body, reassure women that sex is good, that it is meant to be enjoyed.

You may recommend a patient to psychological or psychiatric services for comorbid disorders. Be careful when recommending her to mental health services simply for her sexual dysfunction, as they may recommend illicit methods to become more comfortable with sexuality. Do not refer her to explicit websites or video series. Do not recommend self-stimulation. Do not recommend experimentation with more than a spouse.

Psychiatry

A relatively prominent problem that has come up since I've started this blog is quality of psychiatry services. Some mental health professionals, especially those who adhere to the whims of the APA, not only have incorrect ideas of sexuality but also have incorrect ideas spirituality and medications. Others are incompetent.

I've seen OB/GYN residents and fellows of all stripes struggle with conflicts with consultants. Bottom line is: if you don't think the provider will offer benefit to your patient, don't consult them. Consult someone else. If there is no one else, use experts available in other venues (online, prior institutions) to answer your clinical question.

Vulvar care

As with sexual health, anything amounting to masturbation should be avoided. In general, the other meds, lubricants, behavioral modifications, and hygiene counseling in vulvar care is licit.

End-of-life (GYN oncology)

Futility of surgery: many, many times residents in my program have operated while not being excited about it, although we're young and maybe don't understand everything. If your conscience moves you to protest a surgery based on a patient's medical fragility, say so and consider escalating it to the ethics committee if you have an appropriate way to do so.

Some oncologists do not give percentages for success for treatment unless a patient asks. Others always deliver expectations. If a patient asks for a percentage of success, always give an evidence-based, up to date number or offer to ask someone for the answer and do not rest until the patient gets an answer or says she doesn't want one after all. If you believe someone is being led to chemo or to hospice out of a wrong idea of percentages of success or failure, ask the attending and ask the patient what their view of the situation is, before wading in.

Ethics committees are great except when they're ineffective or pancretist. When faced with an ethics committee that cannot find the moral truth, many trainees are powerless. It is licit to withdraw your opposition in the face of impossible odds, but it is best to make it clear that you still maintain your position and beliefs.

Hospice is great except when its not. Sadly, since I've started this blog I've realized that not all hospice programs are focused on the patient's autonomy. If hospice personnel at the program that will be covered by the patient's insurance demand code statuses that the patient does not want, or demand POLST or other documents the patient does not want, offer to provide similar services (e.g. narcotic and benzo scripts, DME scripts, megace/nutritional scripts, anticholinergics) through the resident clinic or another venue. Never participate in physician-assisted suicide. Counsel actively against it.

Friday, December 15, 2017

Servant and Doctor

As every July intern (and July upper-level) knows, becoming a physician requires a certain authority, almost a certain hubris. While any leadership role requires poise and prudence, the physician is uniquely in charge. Physicians delegate tasks and they're called "orders." Orders are to be followed, or else the physician is to be called and the orders are to be discussed. Healthcare is team-based and multidisciplinary, but there is still a captain of the ship, and his or her orders are the final word.

It is difficult to maintain an attitude of Christian charity and servanthood while executing this role at work. Worse, I get into habits that make it difficult to be an ordinary person in other settings and to be a receptive soul at prayer. I have noticed that I have to intentionally "switch gears" when I am an ordinary parishioner in the Young Adult group, a cantor at Mass, one of the newest and youngest virgins in the Archdiocese or at the convocation. Even more, I have to be humble when I've been in the wrong in a conflict or when I've been a bad friend and have not kept in touch. I would like to integrate the clinical hubris with the virtue of humility (and common sense) but it seems difficult. Perhaps it will become easier when I'm no longer a trainee, when those in my workplace haven't seen me as an intern who knew nothing. Perhaps it will be easier the more comfortable I am with my scope of practice; perhaps I will have to aggrandize less authority and will simply carry it.

But it seems like a long shot to rely on something spontaneously happening to make it easier. I think I'll have to continue to struggle with changing gears for now, and hope that it becomes easier to drive the stick-shift of my soul through all its settings.