Hippocratic Oath Thesis

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English 10H: Hippocratic Oath Research Paper While the Hippocratic Oath of great antiquity was written in the 5th century by Hippocrates, a greek physician that has been known to be called the “father of medicine,” some physicians have come to feel that the Hippocratic Oath is in all actuality inadequate to address the realities of a medical world that has witnessed huge scientific, economic, political, and social changes, a world of legalized abortion, physician-assisted suicide, and pestilences unheard of in Hippocrates’ time. (“Relevance of the Hippocratic Oath in the 21st Century.”) However, the Hippocratic Oath should not be abandoned but instead required and established in all medical schools but nonetheless the oath should also be revised …show more content…

According to a study published in the American Journal of Public Health, a staggering ⅔’s of the doctors exhibited a racial bias towards the patients. Researchers found that the doctors displayed a moderate anti-black bias and thought of their white patients more likely to be “compliant.” Minorities receive fewer treatment options and poor communication from doctors. Segregated hospitals and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study exemplify how pervasive racism in health care once was. Thankfully, racial minorities are no longer unknowingly used as ‘guinea pigs’ for medical research or denied entry into hospitals based upon their skin color. Studies have found that they do not receive the same standards of care as their white counterparts but the oath reminds the physician that all life is to be preserved, whether it's a king’s or a slave’s. (Nittle, Nadra Kareem) The atmosphere created by racially inferior theories and stereotypes, 246 years of slavery, along with biased educational processes almost inevitably led to medical and scientific abuse, unethical experimentation, and over utilization of African-Americans as subjects for teaching and training purposes. (Byrd, W. M., and L. A. Clayton.) Although, it sounds horrendous and terrifying that racism still exists today there is good news; we can change the way they are viewed and perceived …show more content…

The oath serves as an antidote to professional arrogance, obligating doctors to practice humility and self-awareness, accept their limitations and pursue lifelong learning to better care for the sick. (Hantman, Melissa.) The oath condones certain practices and disapproves of others to prevent anything that could put the patient in harm's way. Even though some of the Hippocratic Oath’s policies have become outdated it should still remain because, the Hippocratic Oath still has relevance to today’s society. Hippocrates applied a common-sense approach to the treatment of disease and he was also a stickler for discipline and precision, veering away from superstition and towards empiricism for the first time in Western traditions. Illness was no longer seen as heavenly retribution for a humans wrongdoings, but rather the result of knowable pathological and environmental causes. Hippocrates synthesized and summarized the best of known medicine that came before him, and pushed forward a new era of clinical practice. The Hippocratic Oath marked the first time an ethical guideline appeared in relation to a profession. (Rosenhek, Jackie.) We could definitely say Hippocrates is deserving of acknowledgement for all types of his works and accomplishments he has created. The original

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