+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin...

Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin...

Date post: 31-Mar-2015
Category:
Upload: bryson-vary
View: 212 times
Download: 0 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
23
Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong
Transcript
Page 1: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation.

Professor Colin ThomsonUniversity of Wollongong

Page 2: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

The issue

All the great surgeons of our time and of generations gone by have been quintessential innovators, trailblazers who have sought to make meaningful differences in how we practice, teach, do research, and administrate. Surgeons are known for taking initiative, being decisive, and leading the way for others to follow; innovation, therefore, is very much part of the surgical phenotype.

(Anees, 2011:642) 

Page 3: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

The issue:

Ethical regulation of surgical innovation: the “last frontier” ?(Reitsma & Moreno 2001)

When is an innovation a variation of current practice something new or research?

Page 4: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

The context: innovation in surgery

haemorrhagic occluder pin

Page 5: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Clinical practice: traditional and laparoscopic appendectomy

Page 6: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Ligation of the internal mammary artery

Failed innovations

Page 7: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

The DePuy ASR hip replacement

At least 50 hip replacement products availableAt least 20 competitors in $2billion global industry

Page 8: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

The ASR hip replacement

2003 European device authority approval

2005 Published concerns about toxicity of metal debris from metal-on-metal hip

replacements.

2006 DePuy paper “Setting the record straight on metal hypersensitivity”

2006 UK agency considers toxicity & appoints expert panel to advise on risk-benefits of metal-on-metal hip replacements

Page 9: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

The ASR hip replacement2007 Fractures & joint/tissue erosion

Australian National Joint Register notifies DePuy annual revision 5xnormal

DePuy explains data away

2008 Reports of high metal ion in blood 100 x normal

2009 DePuy withdraws ASR in Australia

2010 DePuy withdraws ASR world wide

93,000 ASR replacements

predicted 49% failure in 5 years

Page 10: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Regulatory challenge

How promote innovation AND Minimize & manage risks to patients? Can responsive or smart regulation

assist in resolving the regulatory dilemma?

Page 11: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

What is regulation?

the intentional activity of attempting to control, order or influence the

behavior of others.(Black)

Page 12: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Smart regulation*: Principle 1

Prefer policy mixes incorporating instrument and institutional combinations

• Gunningham& Sinclair

Page 13: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Smart regulation: Principle 2

Prefer less interventionist measures

Intervention = Prescription - inflexible & inefficient Coercion – ineffective (conscripts)BUT less interventionist measure must

workCapacity to elevate response

Page 14: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Smart regulation: Principle 3 (incl. responsive regulation)

Escalate up an instrument pyramid to the extent necessary to achieve policy goals

Page 15: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Responsive regulation

Smart regulation varies this by:• including non- government agents

as quasi-regulators• escalating, in event if failure, in multiple ways• triggers: inspection, audits,reporting,etc• buffer zones• circuit breakers

Page 16: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Smart regulation: Principle 4

Empower participants which are in the best position to act as surrogate regulators

More potent More legitimate Government resources limited Governments not omnipotent – but

may be important facilitator via $, or mandating information to insurers

Page 17: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Smart regulation: Principle 5

Maximise opportunities for win/win outcomes

Regulation achieves safety & enables surgeon benefit/incentive?

Professional recognition for notification/auditing of innovations?

Access to intellectual property profits only if safety standards met?

Page 18: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Objectives of regulation

Responsive & smart regulation devised to regulate industry to prevent environmental harm

Objective=risk management Regulating innovation in surgery needs

to: minimize & manage risks to patientsBUT ALSO promote innovation

Page 19: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Could ethics be an element of smart regulation?

(Can ethics be smart?)

Page 20: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Ethics in regulation

What role does or should ethics play in smart or responsive regulation of surgical innovation?

Is innovation consistent with surgical professional ethics?

Is innovation consistent with ethical obligations to patients?

Is ethical self-regulation individual or professional?

Page 21: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Ethics in regulation

Would any such role impair the function of professional ethics as a source of responsibility?

E.g. if ethics becomes associated with (mere) conformity on reporting & auditing of innovation?

Page 22: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Re-examining ethical conduct

What motivates ethical conduct?* Autonomy Mastery Purpose*(Drive, Dan Pink)

Page 23: Responsibility and Surgical Innovation: Locating Ethics in Responsive Regulation. Professor Colin Thomson University of Wollongong.

Acknowledgement


Recommended