International Journal of Circumpolar Health (Aug 2013)

Doing the right thing! A model for building a successful hospital-based ethics committee in Nunavut

  • Madeleine Cole,
  • Gwen Healey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3402/ijch.v72i0.21326
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 72, no. 0
pp. 1 – 5

Abstract

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Background. There exists a need throughout the North to increase capacity to address issues of health ethics and for community members to better understand and share their perspectives on this topic. Ethics comes down to weighing rights and wrongs, evaluating differing needs and understandings, acknowledging the many shades of grey and doing our best to come up with the just, fair and moral approach to the question at hand. Northern regions must collaborate to share capacity, successes and experiences in order to meet the unique needs of northern health care institutions and move forward on this issue. While guidelines for ethical research with indigenous populations exist, little has been published about an Inuit approach to health ethics more broadly. Design . To fill a critical need and to meet accreditation standards, the Qikiqtani General Hospital (QGH) in Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada, is in the process of building an Ethics Committee. Capitalizing on partnerships with other bodies both in northern and southern Canada has proved an efficient and effective way to develop local solutions to challenges that have been experienced both at QGH and other jurisdictions. Methods . The Ottawa Hospital Ethics Office and the active ethics committee at Stanton General Hospital in Yellowknife, NT, contributed expertise and experience, and helped provide some direction for the QGH ethics committee. At the local level, based on our shared commitment to health care ethics, the Qaujigiartiit Health Research Centre is an invaluable partner whose parallel efforts to develop a northern Health Research Ethics Board (REB) gives great synergy to the QGH Ethics Committee. Results . Passion and commitment, as well as administrative support and endorsement from health care leaders, are the aspects of successful initiatives that we have identified to date. Using the information from both the experiences of other partners, as well as information gathered at a retreat held in Iqaluit in September 2011, we are working to develop a model for the QGH ethics committee that incorporates multi-level perspectives, from that of community to that of front-line worker. Conclusion . Ideally, the scope of the QGH Ethics Committee will grow over time to include ethics education, facilitation of clinical ethical consults, ethical review of policy, advice on governance issues and involvement and support of an external northern Health REB.

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