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IM29.1-26 | The Role of the Physician in the Community — Graded Quiz
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A 40-year-old truck driver is found to have hypertensive retinopathy with vision of 6/60 in one eye. He holds a commercial driving licence. He refuses to inform the licensing authority, stating that driving is his only livelihood. His physician documents this refusal. Two weeks later, he is involved in a road traffic accident that kills a pedestrian. In retrospect, which principle conflict was present, and which should have prevailed?
Correct. This scenario illustrates a genuine conflict between the duty of confidentiality (supporting the patient's autonomy and livelihood) and the duties of non-maleficence and justice toward identifiable third parties — other road users. Indian law does not mandate disclosure in this exact scenario, but the ethical framework established in Mr X v Hospital Z (1998) — that confidentiality yields to a serious, foreseeable, identifiable risk — supports disclosure to the licensing authority when the patient refuses. Documenting refusal alone does not discharge the physician's full ethical obligation when harm to others is foreseeable.
The core conflict is between confidentiality (patient's autonomy, livelihood) and non-maleficence/justice (duty to protect identifiable third parties on public roads). Mr X v Hospital Z (1998) established that confidentiality is not absolute when a serious, foreseeable, identifiable risk to third parties exists. Merely documenting refusal may not be sufficient when ongoing harm is predictable.
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A 70-year-old woman with advanced metastatic lung cancer is fully conscious and repeatedly requests that no further chemotherapy or aggressive resuscitation be attempted. Her son insists that 'everything be done' and threatens legal action if any treatment is withheld. In evaluating this situation, which statement best reflects the current medico-legal and ethical position in India?
Correct. Common Cause v Union of India (2018) affirmed the right of a competent adult patient to refuse medical treatment, including life-sustaining treatment, as an expression of the right to dignity under Article 21. A competent patient's autonomous refusal cannot be overridden by family members, including adult children. The son does not hold legal authority over a competent adult. The clinical team should document the patient's repeated refusals, ensure she has had adequate information and time to reflect, and proceed in accordance with her expressed wishes.
A competent adult patient's informed refusal of treatment is legally and ethically binding under Indian law, as affirmed in Common Cause v Union of India (2018). Next-of-kin cannot override a competent patient's autonomous decision. Deferring to family wishes against the patient's explicit refusal would itself constitute an ethical and potentially legal violation.
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A physician in a tertiary care hospital diagnoses a colleague (a fellow consultant) with early alcohol use disorder after treating him for a work-related injury. The colleague asks the physician to keep the diagnosis out of his hospital medical records 'to protect his career.' The most defensible ethical analysis is:
Correct. Accurate medical record documentation is a professional obligation that cannot be selectively waived to protect a colleague's reputation. Omitting or falsifying a diagnosis at a colleague's request constitutes professional misconduct under medical documentation standards. Separately, the physician must assess whether the colleague's condition currently poses a patient-safety risk — if it does, the obligations outlined under IM29.24 (reporting impairment) apply. Career protection of a colleague is not an ethically valid reason to falsify documentation.
Medical record accuracy cannot be compromised to protect a colleague's career. Omitting or recording a false diagnosis on a colleague's request violates documentation ethics. The physician must make an accurate record and separately assess whether the colleague's condition currently poses a risk to patient safety, triggering the reporting obligations for impaired practitioners.
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An ethics committee reviewing a proposed clinical trial is evaluating whether the proposed benefit-risk balance is acceptable for a Phase II trial of a new drug in patients with drug-resistant tuberculosis. The committee notes the drug has significant hepatotoxicity in animal studies. Which principle-based framework should guide the committee's decision about whether to approve, reject, or require protocol modification?
Correct. Research ethics review requires all four principles to be applied together. Non-maleficence requires that foreseeable risks be minimised and proportionate to the expected benefit. Beneficence supports pursuing research for a condition with high unmet need. Autonomy requires that participants be fully informed of hepatotoxicity risks before consenting. Justice requires that the burden and benefit of research are fairly distributed. Protocol modification — for example, requiring serial liver function monitoring and stopping rules — is usually the most proportionate response when a modifiable risk can be reduced without abandoning potentially beneficial research.
Research ethics review applies all four principles together, not one in isolation. Non-maleficence requires risk minimisation, but does not automatically mandate rejection when risk can be mitigated. Beneficence alone cannot override the duty to protect participants. Protocol modification with appropriate monitoring is usually the proportionate response to a known but manageable toxicity signal.
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A physician in a government medical college is the sole anaesthetist on call. He has been on duty for 26 continuous hours and is called for an elective morning operating list. He feels fatigued and recognises his reaction time is slower than normal, but the list is scheduled and the surgical team is waiting. The competency of awareness of limitations (IM29.16) requires the physician to:
Correct. IM29.16 requires the physician to recognise and act on awareness of limitations. A physician who recognises that fatigue has impaired his reaction time should not proceed with elective procedures where patient safety depends on optimal performance. The appropriate action is to escalate to the supervisor or department head, request deferral of the elective list, and arrange appropriate relief. This is not abandonment of duty — genuine emergencies still require attendance; what is inappropriate is proceeding with non-urgent surgery when self-recognised impairment exists.
Awareness of limitations (IM29.16) requires action, not passive acknowledgement. When a physician recognises fatigue-related impairment, proceeding with elective surgery places patients at risk. The correct response is escalation to the supervisor with a request to defer the elective list. Informing the surgeons but proceeding does not adequately protect the patient.
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A patient from a tribal community is enrolled in a maternal health research study. She speaks only a regional dialect and cannot read. Her husband insists he will sign the consent form on her behalf. The ICMR 2017 guidelines on consent for vulnerable populations require:
Correct. ICMR 2017 guidelines affirm that individual informed consent is required from every competent adult participant, regardless of gender, marital status, or community structure. A spouse cannot provide proxy consent for a competent adult. For participants who cannot read, the information must be communicated orally in the participant's own language (using a trained interpreter if needed), and consent is obtained via thumbprint in the presence of an independent, impartial literate witness who signs confirming the process. Community consent from a leader is supplementary in some community-level research designs but does not substitute for individual consent.
A competent adult woman's individual consent cannot be replaced by her husband's signature under ICMR 2017 guidelines. For illiterate participants, the correct process is oral communication in the participant's language, thumbprint consent, and an independent literate impartial witness. Spousal proxy consent for a competent adult violates both ICMR guidelines and the principle of individual autonomy.
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A medical student on rotation in a teaching hospital accidentally views a celebrity patient's test results while logged into a hospital terminal under a senior doctor's credentials (with the doctor's permission for a different task). She tells two classmates informally about the results over lunch. Which professional standard has been most directly violated, and who bears primary responsibility?
Correct. The student's act of disclosing a patient's test results in a non-clinical setting (informally, over lunch, to classmates) is a direct violation of patient privacy (IM29.9) and confidentiality (IM29.10). The student bears primary responsibility for this disclosure — it is not conditional on what classmates do next. The senior's credential-sharing, while a separate information governance breach, does not transfer the student's responsibility. Medical students are bound by the same professional confidentiality obligations as registered practitioners during clinical placements.
Sharing a patient's identifiable health information in a non-clinical setting, even informally, is a direct breach of confidentiality and patient privacy — both core professional obligations. The student bears primary responsibility for this disclosure. Her responsibility is not conditional on downstream sharing by classmates. The senior bears a separate responsibility for inappropriate credential-sharing.
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A hospital introduces a digital prescribing system that generates automatic dosing alerts. A senior physician habitually overrides all alerts without reading them, and a junior doctor working with him copies this behaviour. Two months later, an alert for a critical drug interaction is overridden by the junior doctor and the patient suffers harm. Under a systems-based approach to risk management (IM29.21), the most appropriate analysis of this error is:
Correct. Systems-based risk management, grounded in the Swiss Cheese model (Reason, 1990), distinguishes latent failures (conditions in the system that create error opportunities — here, the unchecked culture of alert override) from active failures (the immediate action causing harm). Both layers must be addressed. Disciplining only the junior doctor without addressing alert fatigue and supervision culture perpetuates the latent failure. This is the key conceptual shift from individual blame to systems thinking in patient safety.
The Swiss Cheese model requires that both latent failures (the institutional culture of alert override, normalised by senior behaviour) and active failures (the junior's individual override) are addressed. Attributing full responsibility to any single actor — the junior doctor, senior physician, or manufacturer — misses the systems dimension and fails to prevent recurrence. Both the individual act and the institutional culture require intervention.
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A physician treating a patient with severe depression is considering sharing clinical details with the patient's employer (an airline) because the employer has directly requested information about the patient's fitness to fly. The patient has not consented to this disclosure and does not want her employer informed. The most appropriate ethical action is:
Correct. The treating physician's duty of confidentiality to the patient prohibits disclosure to the employer without consent, even in safety-sensitive occupations. Aviation fitness certification is the domain of Directorate General of Civil Aviation (DGCA)-approved Aviation Medical Examiners, not treating physicians. The treating physician's role is to provide optimal care for the patient, not to serve as the employer's informant. The patient should be informed about the formal occupational health/AME process. If the physician genuinely believes the patient poses an immediate serious risk and is actively flying, a narrow disclosure pathway may be considered under the Mr X v Hospital Z framework — but a general employer request without an identifiable immediate risk does not meet this threshold.
The treating physician's role is distinct from occupational fitness certification. Disclosing to an employer without the patient's consent, even in a safety-sensitive sector, requires a higher threshold than a general employer request. The correct response is to decline disclosure, inform the patient about the formal AME fitness assessment process, and reserve any disclosure for a situation that specifically meets the Mr X v Hospital Z threshold of serious, foreseeable, identifiable risk.
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During a research consent session, a potential participant asks: 'If I join this study and something bad happens to me, will I get treatment?' Under ICMR 2017 guidelines on research-related injury, the researcher's correct response is:
Correct. ICMR 2017 guidelines explicitly require that research participants be informed of their right to free treatment for research-related injuries or illness throughout the study period, and their right to compensation for research-related harm. These obligations must be stated in the participant information sheet and consent form. Failing to disclose this is a consent process violation. This is not 'undue inducement' — it is an obligatory disclosure of the participant's rights and the sponsor's obligations.
ICMR 2017 mandates that research participants are entitled to free treatment for research-related injury or illness during the study, and to compensation for research-related harm. These are legally and ethically required disclosures in the consent form — not optional, and not undue inducement. Standard health insurance or Ayushman Bharat does not substitute for the researcher or sponsor's obligation.
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A physician is approached by a pharmaceutical company representative who offers to fund the physician's attendance at an international conference, in exchange for prescribing a specified minimum quantity of the company's drug each month. Evaluating this situation through the lens of professional ethics and beneficence, the MOST accurate statement is:
Correct. An arrangement that ties prescription volume to personal financial benefit (conference sponsorship) constitutes a conflict of interest that directly compromises beneficence — the duty to prescribe based on the patient's clinical need, not on financial incentive. Such arrangements are prohibited under MCI/NMC professional conduct standards and the Uniform Code for Pharmaceuticals Marketing Practices (UCPMP). The principle of beneficence (IM29.3) requires that clinical decisions be made solely in the patient's best interest.
Linking prescribing volume to personal financial gain creates a conflict of interest that undermines beneficence. Professional conduct standards for Indian registered medical practitioners and the UCPMP prohibit such arrangements, regardless of drug efficacy or disclosure. Beneficial outcomes for continuing education do not ethically compensate for compromised prescribing integrity.
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A house surgeon finishes a long overnight duty shift but his replacement does not arrive. He is asked to continue another 12 hours. He has a clear outpatient clinic commitment to his attending specialist the next morning. Applying the principles of balancing personal and professional priorities (IM29.17) and time management (IM29.18), his most appropriate action is:
Correct. IM29.17 and IM29.18 require the physician to balance competing professional obligations through communication and escalation, not by silently absorbing every demand. The correct approach is to remain to ensure patient safety in the short term (abandonment would violate non-maleficence), simultaneously escalate the staffing gap to the department head, and proactively communicate with the clinic coordinator about the delay. Delegating to a junior student or leaving without ensuring continuity both create unsafe coverage.
The correct balance is to maintain patient safety while simultaneously escalating the systemic problem. Immediate departure without coverage, silent continuation without communication, or delegation to unqualified juniors all represent inadequate responses. Active escalation to the department head — combined with proactive communication to all affected parties — is the professional response that respects both the immediate patient safety obligation and the competing commitment.
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