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Telemedicine in Primary Health: The Virtual Doctor Project Zambia
Authors:Evans N Mupela  Paul Mustarde  Huw LC Jones
Affiliation:1. The Hospital for Sick Children, c/o Bioethics Department, The Hospital for Sick Children, 555 University Avenue, Toronto, ON, M5G 1X8, Canada
2. B.C. Children’s & Women’s Health Centre, 4500 Oak Street, Building K4-161, Vancouver, B.C., V6H 3N1, Canada
3. Department of Bioethics, 5849 University Avenue, P.O. Box 15000, Halifax, NS, B3H 4H7, Canada
4. The Hospital for Sick Children, c/o Child Health Evaluative Sciences, 555 University Avenue Toronto, Toronto, ON, M5G 1X8, Canada
5. Ontario Hospital Association, 200 Front Street West, Suite 2800, Toronto, Ontario, M5V 3L1, Canada
Abstract:Physician-researchers are bound by professional obligations stemming from both the role of the physician and the role of the researcher. Currently, the dominant models for understanding the relationship between physician-researchers' clinical duties and research duties fit into three categories: the similarity position, the difference position and the middle ground. The law may be said to offer a fourth "model" that is independent from these three categories. These models frame the expectations placed upon physician-researchers by colleagues, regulators, patients and research participants. This paper examines the extent to which the data from semi-structured interviews with 30 physician-researchers at three major pediatric hospitals in Canada reflect these traditional models. It seeks to determine the extent to which existing models align with the described lived experience of the pediatric physician-researchers interviewed. Ultimately, we find that although some physician-researchers make references to something like the weak version of the similarity position, the pediatric-researchers interviewed in this study did not describe their dual roles in a way that tightly mirrors any of the existing theoretical frameworks. We thus conclude that either physician-researchers are in need of better training regarding the nature of the accountability relationships that flow from their dual roles or that models setting out these roles and relationships must be altered to better reflect what we can reasonably expect of physician-researchers in a real-world environment.
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