LAHORE: Punjab Higher Education Commission (PHEC) Chairman Prof Dr Muhammad Nizamuddin says that the medical fraternity is becoming more dependent on technology and more impersonal.

“Fundamental values of medicine insist that a doctor’s obligation is to keep the patient’s interest above everything else,” he said in his keynote speech at the inaugural session of an international conference on medical ethics at the University of Health Sciences (UHS) on Monday.

The two-day conference “Ethics in challenging Times” is being organised in collaboration with the Centre of Biomedical Ethics and Culture (CBEC), Sindh Institute of Urology and Transplantation, Karachi.

“The medical profession is at a crossroads and facing many ethical challenges in its practice. It is a fact that cannot be ignored that there is increasing dissatisfaction on the part of the patients who are expecting more and more from the doctors. Ethics is the basic requirement in every profession but medicine should take a lead in it,” said Prof Nizamuddin.

UHS Vice Chancellor Prof Dr Junaid Sarfraz Khan said important issues of autonomy, confidentiality, justice, beneficence and non-maleficence are the key factors that should guide doctors in their daily decision-making process.

Conference coordinator and UHS Allied Health Sciences Department head Dr Saqib Mahmood said the basic objective of the moot was to deliberate upon the current status of ethics in medical practice in Pakistan and to create awareness about the principles of clinical and biomedical research ethics.

Later, Prof Alastair Campbell of the National University of Singapore gave a presentation on “Bioethics in Asia: the Challenges”; Prof Farhat Moazam, chairperson of CBEC, SIUT, Karachi, spoke on “Bioethics: Indigenising a Foreign Construct”; Prof Aamir Jafarey of the CBEC Karachi on “Bioethics comes to Pakistan-Focus on Capacity Enhancement; Dr Faisal Rasheed Khan from Isra University on “Turning Training into Practice”; Prof Dr Mowadat H. Rana gave a presentation on “Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty: Aesthetics and Medical Ethics”; and, UHS VC Prof Junaid Sarfraz Khan spoke on “Using caricature/videos and images to raise medical professionalism and ethics awareness”.

Published in Dawn, March 21st, 2017

Opinion

Editorial

Resurgent threat
Updated 30 Jun, 2026

Resurgent threat

THE message from Islamabad to Kabul seems to be clear: any act of terrorism inside Pakistan found to be linked to...
Unchecked powers
30 Jun, 2026

Unchecked powers

THERE is little disagreement that Punjab needs stronger tools to combat organised crime, habitual offenders and...
Patriot Pass
30 Jun, 2026

Patriot Pass

IT must be a shared humanity that has bonded the ‘leader of the free world’ so closely with his counterparts in...
‘Missing’ LGs
29 Jun, 2026

‘Missing’ LGs

Across the world, successful civic governance is made possible through effective, responsive local bodies, which are closest to the voter.
Audit or ritual?
29 Jun, 2026

Audit or ritual?

THE AGP’s latest audit report of federal civil accounts is a detailed record of governance failures and...
Al Aqsa under threat
29 Jun, 2026

Al Aqsa under threat

NOT satisfied with the genocidal violence it has unleashed in Gaza, the current Israeli administration is doing all...