
Volume 21, Number 3, Fall 2010
Building Esprit de Corps: Learning to Better Navigate between “My” Patient and “Our” Patient
Evan G. DeRenzo and Jack Schwartz
The Journal of Clinical Ethics 21, no. 3 (Fall 2010): 232-7.
Excellence in the care of hospital patients, particularly those in an intensive care unit, reflects esprit de corps among the care team. Esprit de corps depends on a delicate balance; each clinician must preserve a sense of personal responsibility for "my" patient and yet participate in the collaborative work essential to the care of "our" patient. A harmful imbalance occurs when a physician demands total control of the decision-making process, especially concerning end-of-life treatment options. Although emotional factors may push a physician to claim decision-making exclusivity, compounded by a legal framework that overemphasizes individual responsibility, esprit de corps can be preserved through timely communication among clinicians and a recognition that optimal care for "my" patient requires effective team practice.