Project Details
Ethical and Medico-Philosophical Challenges for Digital Medicine's Benefit to Individual Patients
Applicant
Privatdozent Dr. Marco Stier
Subject Area
Practical Philosophy
History of Philosophy
History of Philosophy
Term
since 2021
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 467991668
Future’s medical research and treatment will change epochally due to the advent of digital technologies. Big-data based treatment advances, increasing digital communication, and the possibility of time- and space-independent patient surveillance will surely be of massive benefit. Yet, there are also risks of harm. In the centre of all normative reflection about how to best shape and control digitalised medicine must be the patient as its primary beneficiary. On the one hand, individual patient benefit comprises a higher degree of the realisation of medicine’s traditional goals. On the other hand, it also includes various aspects of the patient’s role, his intra- and interpersonal relations, and his resulting social embedding. These aspects will be of paramount importance for the overall benefit of tomorrow’s medicine. The project analyses this topic by reference to five core-principles. These are (1) patient’s decisional authority, (2) privacy and individuality, (3) patients’ self-relation and understanding of disease, (4) patient-doctor-machine relationship, and (5) patient trust.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
Co-Investigator
Professorin Dr. Bettina Schöne-Seifert