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| Volume
69 Number 4 September 2002 |
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| Medicine on the Internet: Jewish Perspectives | 267-274 |
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Director, Department of Medicine, Mount Sinai Services at Queens Hospital Center, Jamaica, NY; and Professor of Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.
Presented at the Eleventh International Conference on Jewish Medical Ethics, San Francisco, CA, February 16–19, 2001.
Address correspondence to Fred Rosner, M.D., Queens Hospital Center, 82-68 164th Street, Jamaica, NY 11432.
Accepted for publication April 19, 2001.
ABSTRACT
The ethical principles of beneficence and non-maleficence are deeply rooted in Judaism. A physician is obligated to heal and is given Divine license to do so. A patient is also obligated to seek healing.
Judaism also emphasizes prevention over treatment. Avoidance of danger and thereby the preservation of life and health are biblical mandates. Rules of personal hygiene such as hand washing before eating are also stressed, as are diet, exercise, and general care of the body. Preventive medical services and patient responsibilities are fully in accord with Jewish thought.
Specifically with regard to the internet, Judaism views any new technology or scientific advance with favor if it is used for the betterment of mankind, such as the prevention and treatment of illness. The internet is a wonderful tool to accomplish this purpose. It can promote health education to millions of people and thereby help to prevent illness. It can be used to facilitate communication not only between physicians and patients, but between health care providers and large population groups. All these goals are consonant with traditional Jewish thought and practice.
However, potential negative consequences from the medical use of the internet must be considered and avoided. Misleading or false medical information should be weeded out. Inappropriate medical commercialism on the internet should be banned. Confidentiality of medical information must be preserved. The limitations of the internet for the practice of medicine (e.g., lack of personal patient-physician contact) should be clearly explained to patients, to help them appreciate those features of the internet which can truly benefit them and society.
KEYWORDS
Internet, Jewish perspectives, medical practice.
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