Double Doctrine Effect

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Doctrine of Double Effect The doctrine of double effect is a principle that provides a method for solving moral disputes in which an act will have two effects on the situation, a good one and a bad one per Thomas Aquinas. This doctrine has four parameters that must be met before an act is considered morally permissible. The acts are: 1.The nature-of-the-act condition which means that the action must be morally good or indifferent. 2. The means-end condition which means the bad effect must not be the means by which one achieves the good effect. 3. The right-intention condition which means the intention must be the achieving of only the good effect, with the bad effect being only an unintended side effect. 4. The proportionality condition which means the good effect must be at least equivalent in importance of the bad effect. This doctrine can be used in any situation and can help guide us in the direction we wish to take. Businesses often encounter situations that are difficult and complex by utilizing this principle we can see in a business environment why certain decisions are made and the outcome of those decisions as well as the areas that we need to focus on for improvement. Let’s take this scenario for example – in a health care environment many decisions are made that help treat patients, save lives and provide exceptional patient care. At times doctors, nurses and other medical professionals are faced with situations that are beyond their control. For example in an Emergency Room they see all patients, however at times the wait time may be long, patients that come in via ambulance take priority over all patients in the waiting room in the ER. Two patients come in via ambulance one is a twenty-two year old male coming in for a gun shot wound, the other is a ninety-three year old male that is coming in for shortness of breath and chest pain.
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