Currently, the way of bioethics almost ignores the multicultural social environment that is indicated by the most ethical issues of the present age. For example, fundamentalists believe that "common morality" of "society" supports four basic moral principles. These principles, and more general common ethics, should be a common "common sense" problem. Advocates of case-based moral reasoning methods also assume that moral reasoning is based on a common moral intuition. Neither approach recognizes the existence of multiple cultural and religious traditions in contemporary multicultural society. In a multicultural environment, patients and their families bring in many different cultural models of ethics, health, illness, rehabilitation and relatives, for clinical encounters. Religious beliefs and cultural norms play an important role in building ethical issues. Currently, mainstream bioethics does not focus on the specific moral world of patients and their families. A more humane understanding of the ethical issues occurring in medical institutions requires a deeper understanding of the role of culture and religion in shaping models of ethical reviews.
Bioethics is a study of ethical problems in the advancement of biology and medicine. It is also morally discriminatory as it includes health policy and practice. Bioethics focuses on ethical issues in relation to life science, biotechnology, medicine, politics, law, philosophy. It includes values related to primary care and other medical sectors ("general ethics"). Ethics includes many other science and biological sciences
Ethical issues in medicine and life science are not two relatively new disciplines, "bioethics" and "health and human rights". Ethical issues in medical ethics and related fields have been questioned as long as people are raising questions about ethical issues but only new fields unique to these issues have emerged over the past few decades. With the development of these fields, people began paying more attention to important ethical issues in medicine and biology. It is greatly appreciated, but there are many regrets about the way bioethics has followed and the emergence of health and human rights as a unique discipline. More specifically, bioethics has serious quality control problems, health and human rights seem to be in violation of the disciplinary version of Occam's razor, which is a field of discipline and discipline beyond necessity It prevents spreading.