I never understood Crusher's resistance to a treatment the patient explicitly wanted and knew the risks of![]()
Crusher didn't always have those big moments but "Ethics" is definitely one that I always appreciated.You scare me, Doctor. You risk your patient's lives and justify it in the name of research. Genuine research takes time. Sometimes a lifetime of painstaking, detailed work in order to get any results. Not for you. You take short cuts, right through living tissue. You put your research ahead of your patient's lives, and as far as I'm concerned that's a violation of our most sacred trust." - Dr. Crusher
A patient in Worf's situation is desperate and not informed enough to know if their Doctor is bullshitting them. Consent can be coaxed. Russell absolutely played on Worf's desperation to test her theory. That is NOT something a Doctor should be doing. We're seeing enough of that crap with folk guzzling horse de-worming paste RIGHT NOW.
I never understood Crusher's resistance to a treatment the patient explicitly wanted and knew the risks of![]()
Isn't assisted suicide legal in the Federation? McCoy did it for his father.
If the Patients options are get well, die on the table, or kill themselves, then it seems an easy choice.
That's why I think Crusher is the one whose ethics are questionable in that episode.
Unfortunately, medical ethics is not determined by your opinion, but by the strictures laid down by Hippocrates, 2400 years ago.
Legitimate treatments, yes. Unapproved, untested, highly experimental, and extremely hazardous alternative treatments that are a step or two above quack medicine, not necessarily.
Legitimate treatments, yes. Unapproved, untested, highly experimental, and extremely hazardous alternative treatments that are a step or two above quack medicine, not necessarily.
Take a hard look at the alternatives Beverly was facing.
1. Provide a safe, proven treatment to her patient that would restore 60-70% of his mobility, with no chance whatsoever of his dying.
2. Go with an unproven, untested treatment that worked less than 40% of the time in an idealized environment, proposed by a doctor who had just KILLED A PATIENT you could have saved, in the name of research.
...
No more so than running with shields down after encountering another vessel. Or forgetting that Vulcans have an inner eyelid. Or that you could reason with anthropoids. Or thinking that maybe the Nazis had the right idea if only a few minor changes were made to the program.That's a hell of a screw-up, don't you think?
No more so than running with shields down after encountering another vessel. Or forgetting that Vulcans have an inner eyelid. Or that you could reason with anthropoids. Or thinking that maybe the Nazis had the right idea if only a few minor changes were made to the program.
But think about this. A patient (Barclay) comes with a minor problem, barely worth mentioning according to Beverly herself and she managed to turn that into an indescribable horror.
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