RIP Ethical Dilemmas

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The RIP system is a highly complex machine used to help doctor’s implements the best medical treatment to incoming patients. As this is a tool to predict the odds of patient’s survival rate, it tests the boundaries of human judgement. RIP is designed to produce the most efficient treatment based on the patient’s symptoms. Hospitals often have overcrowding and are understaffed. This leaves decisions to be made of who gets treated first or at all. The RIP software influences doctor’s decisions. Using the technology to decide who should be treated removes the ethics of humanity. RIP also, discredits doctors and human judgement by allow the doctors to become too dependent. Human judgment is far more powerful than any machine. The mind thinks about multiple factors both medically and ethically. People do not only look at facts, but they see the repercussions of the decisions made. Arthur Caplan a medical ethicist located in …show more content…
When doctors see certain injuries and signs they can then infer other possible issues that may be hidden, and prepare for the worst. A human is able to adapt to different situations that may arise as an operation proceeds. If the doctor uses the program to decide what patient to treat, then are they going to keep updating the system to follow its instructions when a new obstacle occurs? “Computers will be wrong in about 5% of all cases” according to Caplan (Thomas, Hickey, 2015, para. 3). This shows that 1 out of every 20 people the computer will falsely output results. Technology is constantly evolving. While doctors become reliant on computer based technology to do their job, where do the advances go too far? If a computer can decided whether you live then it takes out the semimetal aspect of death. The emotions will fade from humans and death will be nothing more than a computer saying that you are more likely to survive or