The Doctor's Dilemma story
The Doctor's Dilemma is a play by George Bernard Shaw first staged in 1906. It is a problem play about the moral dilemmas created by limited medical resources, and the conflicts between the demands of private medicine as a business and a vocation. The eponymous dilemma of the play is that of the newly honoured doctor Sir Colenso Ridgeon, who has developed a revolutionary new cure for tuberculosis. However, his private medical practice, with limited staff and resources, can only treat ten patients at a time. From a group of fifty patients he has selected ten he believes he can cure and who, he believes, are most worthy of being saved. However, when he is approached by a young woman, Jennifer Dubedat, with a deadly ill husband, Louis Dubedat, he admits he can, at a stretch, save one more patient, but that the individual in question must be shown to be most worthy of being saved.
13 total · 8 major · 5 minor
| Theme | Level | Motivation |
|---|---|---|
| con artistry | major | Louis Dubedat was an unpologetic blaggard and con artist. |
| duty vs. love | major | Colenso struggled with his decision to orchestrate Louis' demise in order to woo Jennifer |
| healthcare in society | major | the play showed how greedy and incompetent Doctors prayed on the hapless population and has been seen as an early call for a national health service |
| husband and wife | major | Louis and Jennifer; Louis and previous wife |
| infatuation | major | Colenso with Jennifer |
| love triangle | major | Louis, Jennifer, Colenso, other wife |
| medical triage | major | at the core of this story was the decision of who deserved saving given that only 10 patient could receive treatment at a time |
| the calculus of human life | major | Colenso time and again struggled with ethical decisions around who lives and who dies as he had the power to cure but a limited number of patients |
| art discussion | minor | Everyone appreciated Louis' fine drawings. |
| doctor-patient confidentiality | minor | Louis briefly accused Colenso of breaking this trust |