Altruism: Brief review of current opinions and implications on community emergency medicine
Article
Oshionwu, EJ and Nwose, EU. 2019. "Altruism: Brief review of current opinions and implications on community emergency medicine." International Journal of Critical Care and Emergency Medicine. 5 (1), p. 066. https://doi.org/10.23937/2474-3674/1510066
Article Title | Altruism: Brief review of current opinions and implications on community emergency medicine |
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Article Category | Article |
Authors | Oshionwu, EJ and Nwose, EU |
Journal Title | International Journal of Critical Care and Emergency Medicine |
Journal Citation | 5 (1), p. 066 |
Number of Pages | 6 |
Year | 2019 |
Publisher | ClinMed International Library |
Place of Publication | United States |
ISSN | 2474-3674 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.23937/2474-3674/1510066 |
Web Address (URL) | https://clinmedjournals.org/articles/ijccem/international-journal-of-critical-care-and-emergency-medicine-ijccem-5-066.php?jid=ijccem |
Abstract | There are several theories on altruism including the concept of pseudo-altruism. The latter constitute divergent opinion around egoism and socioeconomic status (SES). Review has identified that the conflict between altruistic and pseudo-altruistic theoretical approaches can be resolved by combining elements from both concepts. The objective of this commentary is to advance (1) That there is 'benefit to the helping altruistic individual in all altruism theories; and (2) A unifying viewpoint in terms of benefit that while every altruistic act is an adaptive humanitarian behaviour that benefits another person who is primarily the beneficiary, the benefactor always has a benefit that is secondary. Thus, every genuine act of altruism can be easily erroneously deconstructed and reconstructed as pseudo-altruism, which disparages the benefactor and undermines the primary benefit. SES is associated with altruism, and the concept of socioeconomic inequalities in healthcare delivery is alluded to be a reflection of degeneration of altruistic behaviour in society. The famous Good Samaritan story is empirically reviewed to translate altruistic response of individuals of higher SES compared to those of lower counterpart in community health. The implications for health of individuals at the family level, and community-level emergency is briefly espoused. The correlation to current medical practice regarding treating patients with or without health insurance is drawn. A classical workplace experience is also presented to illustrate the current state of intimidation that influences altruism in contemporary healthcare practice. |
Keywords | Benefactor-beneficiary; Critical care; Deconstruction and reconstruction |
Contains Sensitive Content | Does not contain sensitive content |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 420605. Preventative health care |
Byline Affiliations | California Health Care Facility, United States |
Novena University, Nigeria | |
Charles Sturt University |
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