Four basic principles of medical ethics

The four basic principles of medical ethics are as follows:

1, respect principle (autonomy).

The principle of respect means that both doctors and patients should respect each other's personal dignity, emphasizing that medical staff should respect patients' personal dignity and their autonomy in diagnosis and treatment nursing practice. The main performance is that doctors respect patients' autonomy and ensure patients to choose a reasonable diagnosis and treatment plan independently.

2. The principle of harmlessness.

The principle of "no harm" refers to the ethical principle that medical staff avoid patients from undue harm in the process of diagnosis, treatment and nursing, and is the basic principle of medical principles.

3, the principle of good deeds

Beneficial principle refers to the ethical principle of putting patients' health first and earnestly seeking benefits for patients.

4. The principle of justice.

It refers to the principle of treating every patient fairly and honestly in medical service. Including formal fairness and content fairness.

Medical ethics:

Medical ethics is a subject that uses general ethical principles to solve medical moral problems and medical moral phenomena in the process of medical and health practice and medical development. It is an important part of medicine and a branch of ethics.

Medical ethics is a science that uses the theory and method of ethics to study the moral problems of the relationship between people, people and society, and people and nature in the medical field.

Medical ethics is a subject that evaluates whether human medical behavior and medical research conform to morality. In 2007, the governments of People's Republic of China (PRC) and China formulated the Regulations on Human Organ Transplant to ease the ethical disputes about organ transplantation in China.