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Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal |
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Volume 12 No 5 September 2006 |
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Muslim voices from the Eastern Mediterranean Region
F. Moazam1
1Centre of Biomedical Ethics and Culture (CBEC), Sindh Institute of Urology and Transplantation, Karachi, Pakistan (Correspondence to F. Moazam: famoz@mindspring.com).
Introduction
Muslim voices from the Eastern Mediterranean Region was a panel presentation
given 7 August 2006 at the 8th Congress of the International Association of
Bioethics (IAB), Beijing, China, 6–9 August, 2006. The presentation was
sponsored by the World Health Organization Regional Office for the Eastern
Mediterranean (EMRO), Cairo, Egypt, and coordinated by F. Moazam.
Speakers (in order of presentations) and topics
• G.I. Serour, Al-Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt: “Assisted reproductive
technologies (ART) in Egypt: cultural, religious and ethical issues;”
• F. Moazam, Centre of Biomedical Ethics and Culture, Karachi, Pakistan: “Live,
related kidney donation: cultural, religious, and socioeconomic influences on
patient-family-physician dynamics;”
• A. Jafarey, Centre of Biomedical Ethics and Culture, Karachi, Pakistan:
“Informed consent revisited: views of Pakistani physicians and public;”
• M. Bouhaimed, Kuwait University, Kuwait: “Cultural and religious dimensions in
health research: 25 years of community medicine projects in Kuwait.”
Description of session
Due to the inability of the EMRO representative (Dr Abdel Aziz Saleh) to travel
to Beijing for the session, the group suggested that Dr Moazam chair the
session. She welcomed the audience, and spoke of the great diversity (in
history, traditions, ethnicity, indigenous culture, languages, literacy rates,
socioeconomic realities, forms of government, etc.) that can be found among and
within the 21 countries that constitute the Eastern Mediterranean Region of the
World Health Organization. She noted that Muslims of this Region constitute a
preponderance of the populations in these countries and are united by their
shared belief in Islam. And yet these countries also present a many hued quilt
of cultures, value systems, and ways of life that cannot be seen as uniform or
homogenous. In recent debates on the clash of civilizations this fact has
sometimes been forgotten, and Muslims and Islam are frequently portrayed as
monolithic entities. By focusing on the experiences of speakers from Egypt,
Kuwait, and Pakistan, she hoped that the session would highlight the
kaleidoscope world of Muslims. She added that these “Muslim voices” would be
transmitted to the audience through the medium of four physicians who work and
live among the people in these countries
Dr Moazam then introduced the speakers and stated that each presentation would
be followed by 10–15 minutes of discussion, and questions and answers from the
audience.
To set the stage, Dr Serour began with a brief overview of the primary and
secondary sources of sharia and broad principles of Islamic jurisprudence, and
explained how Muslim ulema utilize these in a dynamic fashion to examine and
address novel questions that arise with the advent of modern biomedical science
and technology. In the second part of his talk, turning to his own experience as
an obstetrics/gynaecology specialist, he elaborated on the cultural, religious
and ethical issues facing Muslim physicians and patients with the advent of
assisted reproductive technologies, and how these are being comprehended,
handled and resolved, both within the discourse of Muslim scholars and jurists
and by Muslim physicians and patients in Egypt.
In her presentation, Dr Moazam drew on her sociological and ethnographic
research conducted in a busy transplantation institute in Karachi in which she
focused on genetically-related Muslim kidney donors and recipients, their
families, and the healthcare professionals involved in their care. The
centrality of the extended family in Pakistani life, and shared cultural beliefs
and religious values shape in profound ways the comprehension of what
constitutes ethical conduct within healthcare systems. Her study demonstrated
that the dominant moral ethos of the institute rests on the sense of duty and
obligation of healthcare professionals to patients, and of family members to kin
in renal failure, rather than on autonomy and individual rights, and these form
the central pillars of contemporary bioethics. She alluded to the potential for
distortion in analysing moral systems such as those of the Pakistani institute
through the ethical prism of non-Asian societies.
Dr Jafarey presented the results of a quantitative and qualitative research
project which he has conducted to assess attitudes of Pakistani physicians and
lay public towards the process of sharing medical information and obtaining
informed consent in clinical practice. His study highlighted the fact that that,
in a society in which several generations of a family live deeply interdependent
and family-centred lives, the term “autonomy” takes on a new meaning, different
from the accepted meaning of the word in societies in which individual patients
are seen as the locus for all decision-making connected to their medical care.
He demonstrated that the majority of professionals and lay people interviewed in
Karachi believe that families must play a central role both in discussions
pertaining to the illness of a family member and in decision-making when
therapeutic interventions are indicated.
The final presentation was made by Dr Bouhaimed. She provided an overview of the
many community medicine projects conducted by medical students in Kuwait over
the last two and a half decades, and analysed how many of these revealed
cultural as well as broad religious dimensions and concerns. The themes students
explored were diverse and extended from issues of women’s health and
reproduction to cosmetic surgery and professional ethics. She noted an
increasing interest in bioethics in her country. In the latter half of her talk
she detailed two surveys conducted by students on the understanding and
attitudes of healthcare professionals in Kuwait, nationals and expatriates,
towards the concept of euthanasia for terminally ill patients.
Comments
The general impression of the four speakers is that the session went well. This
is based on the fact that despite 5 sessions occurring at the same time, EMRO’s
“Muslim voices” session drew a respectable-sized audience, and included
participants from Australia, Cambodia, China, Egypt, Malaysia, the Netherlands,
Pakistan, and the United States of America. Each presentation was followed by
interested and interesting questions from the participants about the talk in
particular and aspects of Islam in general. Several people stayed behind
following the end of the session to continue the discussion. Informally, some
made a point of contacting speakers later to describe the session as having been
interesting and informative.
Recommendations
This was the first time that a forum as large as the International Association
of Bioethics (800 international delegates) had held a session devoted
specifically to medical ethics as comprehended by Muslims, and in which the
dynamic nature of sharia in responding to novel needs, and the rich diversity of
Muslim lives was also demonstrated. In addition, we believe that the session
served to make the important point that Muslims draw their sense of moral
conduct and solutions for ethical dilemmas from a combination of human reason,
religious values, and indigenous sociocultural norms. The speakers believe that
there is a great need for encouraging similar presentations in future
international bioethical conferences to enrich a bioethics discourse that has
tended to remain largely secular and philosophical in nature.
Acknowledgements
The presenters would like to express their gratitude to the WHO Regional Office
for the Eastern Mediterranean in Cairo, and especially to Dr Khayat, whose
support made this session possible.