Do tradition and religion
influence the question? Certainly! In the East, in
the Chinese race, Confucianism with its emphasis on
benevolence, righteousness, and humanism greatly influences
the behaviour of doctors. In the West, Christianity
with its emphasis on loving God and loving your neighbour
as yourself has a powerful influence."
What do you think is
the answer to this question? I myself decided to write
to a doctor friend (a woman doctor) who lives in Scotland
and ask her opinion. She wrote back and said (here
is the letter dated 9th September, 1998):
"At first thought, a
good doctor, I should say, has the characteristics
of a good member of society' he has kindness, patience,
interest in other people, temperance (moderation),
humility. But he, unlike the rest of humanity, also
needs:
knowledge of the human
body,
up-to-date information
about new technical achievement in his specialty,
contact
with his fellow doctors, skill...judgment...
loyalty and the capacity
not to betray confidence,
and, above all, the
capacity for sheer hard work, often day and night."
I feel sure you will
agree with her views. I must point out the human qualities
which she mentioned, such as kindness, patience, moderation,
humility, and interest in other people. But she also
mentions "up-to-date knowledge of new technical achievements
in his specialty."
At
the present time there is tremendous emphasis on using
scientific medical equipment for diagnosis and treatment.
Hospital are full of
advanced scientific equipment: the CT and MRI scans,
microsurgery, advances in molecular genetics, and
the astonishing range of tests available in the clinical
laboratories.
This is right and perfectly
understandable.
But we may forget the
human side of medical practice and I would remind
you of its importance: