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L3. INTRODUCTION TO MEDICAL ETHICS (3) Dr. Ghaiath M. A. Hussein Asst. Prof. (Bioethics) Alfarabi College of Medicine, (13.02.2017)

L3 introduction-to-Islamic-medical-ethics(13.02.17)

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Page 1: L3 introduction-to-Islamic-medical-ethics(13.02.17)

L3. INTRODUCTION TO MEDICAL ETHICS (3)

Dr. Ghaiath M. A. HusseinAsst. Prof. (Bioethics)

Alfarabi College of Medicine, (13.02.2017)

Page 2: L3 introduction-to-Islamic-medical-ethics(13.02.17)

Schools of thought in moral reasoning (cont.)

Principlism: Autonomy: respect humans' ability

to choose, Beneficence: Do Good for others, Nonmaleficence (Do No Harm), & Justice (Be fair to your patients)

Where do these principles meet with Islam?

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ISLAMIC BIOETHICS

Section IV:Islamic approach to ethical analysis and decision making

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Ethics in Islam… not a separate entity!

Law

Ethics

Religious Practice

Economy

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Page 5: L3 introduction-to-Islamic-medical-ethics(13.02.17)

How should Muslims decide their acts?

And I (Allâh) created not the jinn and mankind except that they should worship Me (Alone). الجن خلقت وما

الذاريات ) ليعبدون إال (56واإلنس

Worship in Islam includes: To follow the orders of Allah and His Prophet Mohamed (PBUH) “And whosoever does not judge by what Allâh has revealed,

such are the Kâfirûn (i.e. disbelievers - of a lesser degree as they do not act on Allâh’s Laws” (5: 44); “And whosoever does not judge by that which Allâh has revealed, such are the Zâlimûn (polytheists and wrong-doers - of a lesser degree)” (5: 45); “And whosoever does not judge by what Allâh has revealed (then) such (people) are the Fâsiqûn [the rebellious i.e. disobedient (of a lesser degree)” (5: 47)

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Sources of Islamic Morality Main sources: 1)The Koran and 2) the

Sunna, Secondary sources: •Ijmaa means a unanimous agreement among Muslim Scolars on any Shariah ruling•Qiyas refers to likening a new case in question without textual evidence to an original ruling which is supported by explicit legal text which shares the same cause. •Maslahah means deciding a ruling based on the principle of general public interest in issues which do not have clear and specific ruling from text of either Al-Quran or Al-Sunnah. http://ghaiathme.wixsite.com/mep-course

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Sources of Islamic Morality

Main sources: 1)The Koran and 2) the Sunna, Secondary sources: •Istihsan refers to setting aside an established ruling backed by dalil (evidence) on a matter in favor of an alternative ruling which is stronger and more convincing than the first ruling, based on the support by dalil.•Istishab refers to the presumption of continuity of the original ruling as long as there is no other dalil to establish the contrary.10•Sadd Zari`ah signifies an approach used to prevent any means to evil in order to avoid from forbidden acts. It is regarded as an early preventive measure to keep away a Muslim from committing actions prohibited by Allah SWT.•`urf is defined as established norms and common to the majority of people in a community either in the form of sayings or doings as long as it does not contradict the Shariah ruling.

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Page 8: L3 introduction-to-Islamic-medical-ethics(13.02.17)

Goals of Islamic Regulations

The five purposes of Sharia are to preserve person’s:

1. Religion;2. Soul;3. Mind;4. Wealth; &5. Progeny. All Islamic legislations came to achieve these

goals.http://ghaiathme.wixsite.com/mep-course

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What is Islamic Bioethics?• It is the methodology of

• defining, analysing and resolving the ethical issues that arise in healthcare practice, or research;

• based on the Islamic moral and legislative sources (Koran, Sunna & Ijtihad); and• aims at achieving the goals of Islamic morality (i.e. preservation of human’s religion, soul,

mind, wealth & progeny )

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Page 10: L3 introduction-to-Islamic-medical-ethics(13.02.17)

What’s unique about Islamic Bioethics?

• Clear and fixed sources• Clear goals of morality (Maqasid Alshariya)• Its moral style endorses values of:

▫ Bringing hope ( تنفروا وال (بشروا▫ Softness ( لينا قوال له (فقوال▫ Kindness ( زانه اال شيء في الرفق كان (ما▫ Respect for vulnerable ( بالقوارير لم ) (رفقا من منا ليس

صغيرنا ويرحم كبيرنا (يوقر

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Page 11: L3 introduction-to-Islamic-medical-ethics(13.02.17)

Islamic Principles & Maxims Applicable in Medicine

1. The principle of Intention (Qasd): Each action is judged by the intention behind it

2. The principle of Certainty (Yaqeen): Certainty can not be removed by doubt

3. The principle of Injury/Harm (Dharar):

Injury should be relieved; An individual should not harm others or be harmed by others

- An injury is not relieved by inflicting or causing a harm of the same degree

- Prevention of harm has priority over pursuit of a benefit of equal worth

- the lesser harm is committed

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Page 12: L3 introduction-to-Islamic-medical-ethics(13.02.17)

Islamic Principles & Maxims ...cont.

4. The principle of Hardship (Mashaqqat): Difficulty calls forth ease, Necessity (Dharuraat) legalizes the prohibited

5. The principle of - Custom or precedent (Urf): Custom is recognized as a source of law on which

legal rulings are based unless contradicted specifically by text from the main legislative sources, i.e. Koran and Sunna.

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THANK YOU

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

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