Adopted by the 35th World Medical Assembly, Venice, Italy, October 1983
Revised by the 57th WMA General Assembly, Pilanesberg, South Africa, October 2006
and by the 73rd
WMA General Assembly, Berlin, Germany, October 2022

 

PREAMBLE

When a patient is seriously ill and the restoration of health may not be possible, the physician and the patient are often faced with a complex set of decisions regarding medical treatment.

The end of life must be recognized and respected as an important part of a person’s life.

Advances in medical science have improved the ability of physicians to address many issues associated with end-of-life care. While the priority of research to cure disease should not be compromised, more attention must be paid to developing palliative treatments and improving assessment and response to the physical, psychological, social and spiritual or existential components of terminal illnesses and other conditions at the end of life.

WMA remains firmly opposed to euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide, as set forth in the WMA Declaration on Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide.

Ethically-appropriate care at the end of life should routinely promote patient autonomy and shared decision-making, and be respectful of the values of the patient, his or her family or intimate associates, and surrogate(s). The WMA recognizes that attitudes and beliefs toward death and dying vary widely from culture to culture and among different religions, and palliative care resources are unevenly distributed. The approach to medical care at the end of life will be influenced significantly by these factors, and thus attempting to develop detailed universal guidelines on terminal care is neither practical nor wise. Therefore, the WMA articulates the following:

 

RECOMMENDATIONS

Pain and Symptom Management

  1. Palliative care at the end of life is part of good medical care. The objective of palliative care is to maintain patient dignity and freedom from distressing symptoms. Care plans should emphasize keeping a patient as comfortable as possible and the patient’s pain controlled while recognizing the importance of attention to the social, psychological and spiritual needs of the patient, and his or her family and intimate associates.
  2. The clinical management of pain in patients at the end of life is of paramount importance in terms of alleviating suffering. The WMA Resolution on Access to Adequate Pain Treatment (2020) makes recommendations for physicians and governments that optimize treatment of pain and other distressing symptoms. Physicians and National Medical Associations should promote the dissemination and sharing of information regarding pain management to ensure that all physicians involved in end-of-life care have access to best practice guidelines and the most current treatments and methods available. National Medical Associations should oppose laws or regulations that unduly inhibit physicians from providing intensive, clinically appropriate symptoms management for patients at the end of life in keeping with recognized best practices.
  3. When a patient at the end of life experiences severe pain or other distressing clinical symptoms that do not respond to intensive, symptom-specific palliation, it can be appropriate to offer sedation to unconsciousness as an intervention of last resort. Sedation to unconsciousness must never be used to intentionally cause a patient’s death and should be restricted to patients in the final stages of life. Thorough efforts should be made to obtain consent of the patient or the patient’s surrogate(s).
  4. Palliative care is often provided by multidisciplinary healthcare teams. When possible, the physician should be the leader of the team, being responsible, amongst other obligations, for diagnosis and medical treatment plans.  A carefully kept medical record is of the utmost importance. The rationale for all symptom management interventions, including medications for symptom relief, should be documented in the medical record, including the degree and length of sedation and specific expectations for continuing, withdrawing, or withholding future life-sustaining treatments.
  5. The health care team should promote collaborative care of the patient and offer bereavement support after the patient’s death. The needs of children and families or intimate associates may require special attention and competence, both when children are patients and when they are dependents of patients.

Education and Research

  1. Education of healthcare professionals should include the teaching of end-of-life medical care. Where it does not exist, the establishment of palliative medicine as a medical specialty should be considered. In countries where palliative medicine is not a recognized specialty, post-graduate training in palliative medicine can nevertheless improve the quality of palliative care provided.
  2. Physician education should help to develop the skills necessary to increase the prevalence and quality of meaningful patient advance care planning for patients with life-threatening illness and the right of patients to use written advance directives that describe their wishes and goals regarding care in the event that they are unable to communicate. Physicians should receive education to encourage their patients to formally document their goals, values and treatment preferences and to appoint a substitute health care decision maker with whom the patient can discuss in advance his or her values regarding health care and treatment.
  3. Governments and research institutions are encouraged to invest additional resources in developing treatments to improve end-of-life care. This includes, but is not limited to, supporting research on general medical care, specific treatments, psychological implications and organization to improve end-of-life care.
  4. When employing treatments, the physician must carefully consider the balance between the intended benefits to the patient and the potential harm. National Medical Associations should support the formulation of palliative treatment guidelines.
  5. The physician must also communicate to the patient a willingness to discuss at any time the natural course of the disease and what to expect during the dying process, while also providing guidance about treatments and alternatives that could ease the patient’s suffering, including palliative care or psychotherapy. If a patient indicates a desire to die or expresses suicidal thoughts, the physician has a duty to engage in open and confidential discussions with the patient to understand the motives and reasoning behind these thoughts.
  6. Physicians should assist the dying patient in maintaining an optimal quality of life by controlling symptoms and addressing psychosocial and spiritual needs, to enable the patient to die with dignity and in comfort. Physicians should inform patients of the availability, benefits and other aspects of palliative care. Discussions about patient preferences should be initiated early, routinely offered to all patients and should be revisited regularly to explore any changes patients may have in their wishes, especially as their clinical condition changes. Information and communication among the patient, his or her family or intimate associates, surrogates and members of the health care team are one of the fundamental pillars of quality care at the end of life.
  7. Physicians should endeavor to identify, understand and address the psychosocial and spiritual needs of their patients, especially as they relate to patients’ physical symptoms. Physicians should try to ensure that psychological, social and spiritual resources are available to patients, their families and intimate associates, to help them deal with the anxiety, fear and grief associated with the end of life.
  8. Physicians should encourage patients to designate a substitute decision-maker/surrogate to make decisions that are not expressed in an advance directive. In particular, physicians should discuss the patient’s wishes regarding the approach to life-sustaining interventions as well as palliative measures that might have the additional effect of accelerating death. Because documented advance directives are sometimes not available in emergency situations, physicians should emphasize to patients the importance of discussing treatment preferences with individuals who are likely to act as substitute health care decision-makers/surrogates. Whenever possible and consented to by the patient, the patient’s substitue decision-makers/surrogates should be included in these conversations.
  9. If a patient has decision-making capacity, his or her autonomous right to refuse any medical treatments or interventions must be respected even if the patient’s life may be shortened. Physicians should make sure that the patient is adequately treated for pain and discomfort before consent for end-of-life care is obtained in order to ensure that unnecessary physical and mental suffering do not interfere with decision making. Laws regarding the decision-making capacity of minor patients vary greatly, but discussions with the family, and child, if possible, are encouraged.
  10. Upon a patient’s death, physicians may apply such means as are necessary to keep organs viable for transplantation, provided that they act in accordance with the ethical guidelines established in the WMA Declaration of Sydney on the Determination of Death and the Recovery of Organs. In addition, any transplantation must be in accordance with the principles in the WMA Statement on Organ and Tissue Donation.

Adopted by the 3rd General Assembly of the World Medical Association, London, England, October 1949
Revised by the 22nd World Medical Assembly, Sydney, Australia, August 1968,
the 35th World Medical Assembly, Venice, Italy, October 1983,
the 57th WMA General Assembly, Pilanesberg, South Africa, October 2006
and by the 73rd WMA General Assembly, Berlin, Germany, October 2022

Preamble

The World Medical Association (WMA) has developed the International Code of Medical Ethics as a canon of ethical principles for the members of the medical profession worldwide. In concordance with the WMA Declaration of Geneva: The Physician’s Pledge and the WMA’s entire body of policies, it defines and elucidates the professional duties of physicians towards their patients, other physicians and health professionals, themselves, and society as a whole.

The physician must be aware of applicable national ethical, legal, and regulatory norms and standards, as well as relevant international norms and standards.

Such norms and standards must not reduce the physician’s commitment to the ethical principles set forth in this Code.

The International Code of Medical Ethics should be read as a whole and each of its constituent paragraphs should be applied with consideration of all other relevant paragraphs. Consistent with the mandate of the WMA, the Code is addressed to physicians. The WMA encourages others who are involved in healthcare to adopt these ethical principles.

 

General principles

1. The primary duty of the physician is to promote the health and well-being of individual patients by providing competent, timely, and compassionate care in accordance with good medical practice and professionalism.

The physician also has a responsibility to contribute to the health and well-being of the populations the physician serves and society as a whole, including future generations.

The physician must provide care with the utmost respect for human life and dignity, and for the autonomy and rights of the patient.

2. The physician must practise medicine fairly and justly and provide care based on the patient’s health needs without bias or engaging in discriminatory conduct on the basis of age, disease or disability, creed, ethnic origin, gender, nationality, political affiliation, race, culture, sexual orientation, social standing, or any other factor.

3. The physician must strive to use health care resources in a way that optimally benefits the patient, in keeping with fair, just, and prudent stewardship of the shared resources with which the physician is entrusted.

4. The physician must practise with conscience, honesty, integrity, and accountability, while always exercising independent professional judgement and maintaining the highest standards of professional conduct.

5. Physicians must not allow their individual professional judgement to be influenced by the possibility of benefit to themselves or their institution. The physician must recognise and avoid real or potential conflicts of interest. Where such conflicts are unavoidable, they must be declared in advance and properly managed.

6. Physicians must take responsibility for their individual medical decisions and must not alter their sound professional medical judgements on the basis of instructions contrary to medical considerations.

7. When medically appropriate, the physician must collaborate with other physicians and health professionals who are involved in the care of the patient or who are qualified to assess or recommend care options. This communication must respect patient confidentiality and be confined to necessary information.

8. When providing professional certification, the physician must only certify what the physician has personally verified.

9. The physician should provide help in medical emergencies, while considering the physician’s own safety and competence, and the availability of other viable options for care.

10. The physician must never participate in or facilitate acts of torture, or other cruel, inhuman, or degrading practices and punishments.

11. The physician must engage in continuous learning throughout professional life in order to maintain and develop professional knowledge and skills.

12. The physician should strive to practise medicine in ways that are environmentally sustainable with a view to minimising environmental health risks to current and future generations.

Duties to the patient

13. In providing medical care, the physician must respect the dignity, autonomy, and rights of the patient. The physician must respect the patient’s right to freely accept or refuse care in keeping with the patient’s values and preferences.

14. The physician must commit to the primacy of patient health and well-being and must offer care in the patient’s best interests. In doing so, the physician must strive to prevent or minimise harm for the patient and seek a positive balance between the intended benefit to the patient and any potential harm.

15. The physician must respect the patient’s right to be informed in every phase of the care process. The physician must obtain the patient’s voluntary informed consent prior to any medical care provided, ensuring that the patient receives and understands the information needed to make an independent, informed decision about the proposed care. The physician must respect the patient’s decision to withhold or withdraw consent at any time and for any reason.

16. When a patient has substantially limited, underdeveloped, impaired, or fluctuating decision-making capacity, the physician must involve the patient as much as possible in medical decisions. In addition, the physician must work with the patient’s trusted representative, if available, to make decisions in keeping with the patient’s preferences, when those are known or can reasonably be inferred. When the patient’s preferences cannot be determined, the physician must make decisions in the patient’s best interests. All decisions must be made in keeping with the principles set forth in this Code.

17. In emergencies, where the patient is not able to participate in decision making and no representative is readily available, the physician may initiate an intervention without prior informed consent in the best interests of the patient and with respect for the patient’s preferences, where known.

18. If the patient regains decision-making capacity, the physician must obtain informed consent for further intervention.

19. The physician should be considerate of and communicate with others, where available, who are close to the patient, in keeping with the patient’s preferences and best interests and with due regard for patient confidentiality.

20. If any aspect of caring for the patient is beyond the capacity of a physician, the physician must consult with or refer the patient to another appropriately qualified physician or health professional who has the necessary capacity.

21. The physician must ensure accurate and timely medical documentation.

22. The physician must respect the patient’s privacy and confidentiality, even after the patient has died. A physician may disclose confidential information if the patient provides voluntary informed consent or, in exceptional cases, when disclosure is necessary to safeguard a significant and overriding ethical obligation to which all other possible solutions have been exhausted, even when the patient does not or cannot consent to it. This disclosure must be limited to the minimal necessary information, recipients, and duration.

23. If a physician is acting on behalf of or reporting to any third parties with respect to the care of a patient, the physician must inform the patient accordingly at the outset and, where appropriate, during the course of any interactions. The physician must disclose to the patient the nature and extent of those commitments and must obtain consent for the interaction.

24. The physician must refrain from intrusive or otherwise inappropriate advertising and marketing and ensure that all information used by the physician in advertising and marketing is factual and not misleading.

25. The physician must not allow commercial, financial, or other conflicting interests to affect the physician’s professional judgement.

26. When providing medical care remotely, the physician must ensure that this form of communication is medically justifiable and that the necessary medical care is provided. The physician must also inform the patient about the benefits and limitations of receiving medical care remotely, obtain the patient’s consent, and ensure that patient confidentiality is upheld. Wherever medically appropriate, the physician must aim to provide care to the patient through direct, personal contact.

27. The physician must maintain appropriate professional boundaries. The physician must never engage in abusive, exploitative, or other inappropriate relationships or behaviour with a patient and must not engage in a sexual relationship with a current patient.

28. In order to provide care of the highest standards, physicians must attend to their own health, well-being, and abilities. This includes seeking appropriate care to ensure that they are able to practise safely.

29. This Code represents the physician’s ethical duties. However, on some issues there are profound moral dilemmas concerning which physicians and patients may hold deeply considered but conflicting conscientious beliefs.

The physician has an ethical obligation to minimise disruption to patient care. Physician conscientious objection to provision of any lawful medical interventions may only be exercised if the individual patient is not harmed or discriminated against and if the patient’s health is not endangered.

The physician must immediately and respectfully inform the patient of this objection and of the patient’s right to consult another qualified physician and provide sufficient information to enable the patient to initiate such a consultation in a timely manner.

Duties to other physicians, health professionals, students, and other personnel

30. The physician must engage with other physicians, health professionals and other personnel in a respectful and collaborative manner without bias, harassment, or discriminatory conduct. The physician must also ensure that ethical principles are upheld when working in teams.

31. The physician should respect colleagues’ patient-physician relationships and not intervene unless requested by either party or needed to protect the patient from harm. This should not prevent the physician from recommending alternative courses of action considered to be in the patient’s best interests.

32. The physician should report to the appropriate authorities conditions or circumstances which impede the physician or other health professionals from providing care of the highest standards or from upholding the principles of this Code. This includes any form of abuse or violence against physicians and other health personnel, inappropriate working conditions, or other circumstances that produce excessive and sustained levels of stress.

33. The physician must accord due respect to teachers and students.

Duties to society

34. The physician must support fair and equitable provision of health care. This includes addressing inequities in health and care, the determinants of those inequities, as well as violations of the rights of both patients and health professionals.

35. Physicians play an important role in matters relating to health, health education, and health literacy. In fulfilling this responsibility, physicians must be prudent in discussing new discoveries, technologies, or treatments in non-professional, public settings, including social media, and should ensure that their own statements are scientifically accurate and understandable.

Physicians must indicate if their own opinions are contrary to evidence-based scientific information.

36. The physician must support sound medical scientific research in keeping with the WMA Declaration of Helsinki and the WMA Declaration of Taipei.

37. The physician should avoid acting in such a way as to weaken public trust in the medical profession. To maintain that trust, individual physicians must hold themselves and fellow physicians to the highest standards of professional conduct and be prepared to report behaviour that conflicts with the principles of this Code to the appropriate authorities.

38. The physician should share medical knowledge and expertise for the benefit of patients and the advancement of health care, as well as public and global health.

Duties as a member of the medical profession

39. The physician should follow, protect, and promote the ethical principles of this Code. The physician should help prevent national or international ethical, legal, organisational, or regulatory requirements that undermine any of the duties set forth in this Code.

40. The physician should support fellow physicians in upholding the responsibilities set out in this Code and take measures to protect them from undue influence, abuse, exploitation, violence, or oppression.

©2022 World Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. All intellectual property rights in the International Code of Medical Ethics are vested in the World Medical Association.

Croatian translation

Portuguese translation

Adopted by the 2nd General Assembly of the World Medical Association, Geneva, Switzerland, September 1948
and amended by the 22nd World Medical Assembly, Sydney, Australia, August 1968
and the 35th World Medical Assembly, Venice, Italy, October 1983
and the 46th WMA General Assembly, Stockholm, Sweden, September 1994
and editorially revised by the 170th WMA Council Session, Divonne-les-Bains, France, May 2005
and the 173rd WMA Council Session, Divonne-les-Bains, France, May 2006
and amended by the 68th WMA General Assembly, Chicago, United States, October 2017

 

The Physician’s Pledge

AS A MEMBER OF THE MEDICAL PROFESSION:

I SOLEMNLY PLEDGE to dedicate my life to the service of humanity;

THE HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF MY PATIENT will be my first consideration;

I WILL RESPECT the autonomy and dignity of my patient;

I WILL MAINTAIN the utmost respect for human life;

I WILL NOT PERMIT considerations of age, disease or disability, creed, ethnic origin, gender, nationality, political affiliation, race, sexual orientation, social standing or any other factor to intervene between my duty and my patient;

I WILL RESPECT the secrets that are confided in me, even after the patient has died;

I WILL PRACTISE my profession with conscience and dignity and in accordance with good medical practice;

I WILL FOSTER the honour and noble traditions of the medical profession;

I WILL GIVE to my teachers, colleagues, and students the respect and gratitude that is their due;

I WILL SHARE my medical knowledge for the benefit of the patient and the advancement of healthcare;

I WILL ATTEND TO my own health, well-being, and abilities in order to provide care of the highest standard;

I WILL NOT USE my medical knowledge to violate human rights and civil liberties, even under threat;

I MAKE THESE PROMISES solemnly, freely, and upon my honour.

 

Adopted by the 39th World Medical Assembly, Madrid, Spain, October 1987,
and reaffirmed by the 170th WMA Council Session, Divonne-les-Bains, France, May 2005 and by the 200th WMA Council Session, Oslo, Norway, April 2015,
and rescinded and archived by the 70th WMA General Assembly, Tbilisi, October 2019
* This document has been replaced by the completely rewritten  WMA Declaration on Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide” (2019)

 

Euthanasia, that is the act of deliberately ending the life of a patient, even at the patient’s own request or at the request of close relatives, is unethical. This does not prevent the physician from respecting the desire of a patient to allow the natural process of death to follow its course in the terminal phase of sickness.