Verified Document

Good Clinical Practice Around The World Essay

¶ … Clinical Practice The general topic to be covered in this brief response is good clinical practice (GCP). Specifically, there will be a focus on how clinical practice can be the same when it comes to comparing country to country or culture to culture. There should also be a focus on how different cultures and countries can be different. There can even be variances and outliers within a singular culture rather than the disparities being between only different systems altogether. The author of this report will answer to whether good clinical practice is equally rigorous and advanced in all countries or whether there are variances from area to area as one travels around the world. Further, the author will explain why or why not that rigor exists. Examples will be provided to justify the answers given. While the rigor applies to good clinical practice does indeed vary from area to area, culture and resources have a lot to do with that being the case.

Analysis

As indicated in the introduction, there is indeed a variance from country to country and culture to culture when it comes to good clinical practice. These variances can indeed occur within a single culture....

One example came about in United Kingdom when there was concerns from Muslims about handwashing and how not wearing sleeves was deemed to be lacking modesty. Critics of this assertion countered that sleeves in a medical setting are basically germ magnets and that allowing sleeves for any reason (religious/cultural or not) was just dangerous for patients. However, a middle ground was struck in the form of allowing the Muslim women in question to use disposable sleeves so that they could maintain their modesty while at the same time keeping things as sanitary as possible for patients (Smith, 2015). However, when looking at comparisons between countries or, better yet, regions of the world, the differences become starker. In many countries of the Middle East and Southeast Asia, Muslims are a dominant part (or THE dominant part) of the population and this leads to an overall shift in the general standards. This is not to say that they are "wrong" and that Western standards are "right," but it is generally accepted that one way is better than the other by most people. Indeed, many Muslims will attempt to be flexible but they will generally not do something that conflicts with their beliefs even if the…

Sources used in this document:
References

Fine, R. (2005). From Quinlan to Schiavo: medical, ethical, and legal issues in severe brain injury. Proceedings (Baylor University. Medical Center), 18(4), 303. Retrieved from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1255938/

Smith, R. (2010). Female Muslim doctors allowed to wear disposable sleeves for modesty: official guidance. Telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 10 September 2015, from http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/news/7528335/Female-Muslim-doctors-allowed-to-wear-disposable-sleeves-for-modesty-official-guidance.html

Taheri, N. (2015). Health Care in Islamic History and Experience - EthnoMed. Ethnomed.org. Retrieved 10 September 2015, from http://ethnomed.org/cross-cultural-health/religion/health-care-in-islamic-history-and-experience
Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now