Literature DB >> 10127995

The doctor as double agent.

M Angell.   

Abstract

American doctors in the 1990s are being asked to serve as "double agents," weighing competing allegiances to patients' medical needs against the monetary costs to society. This situation is a reaction to rapid cost increases for medical services, themselves the result of the haphazard development since the 1920s of an inherently inflationary, open-ended system for funding and delivering health care. The answer to an inefficient system, however, is not to stint on care, but rather to restructure the system to remove the inflationary pressures. As long as we are spending enormous resources on an inherently inefficient and inflationary system we cannot justify asking doctors to withhold beneficial care to save money for third-party payers. Doing so serves a largely political agenda and endangers the patient-centered ethic that is central to medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Analytical Approach; Health Care and Public Health

Mesh:

Year:  1993        PMID: 10127995     DOI: 10.1353/ken.0.0253

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kennedy Inst Ethics J        ISSN: 1054-6863


  36 in total

1.  Physician participation in capital punishment: a question of professional integrity.

Authors:  A Sikora; A R Fleischman
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  1999-12       Impact factor: 3.671

2.  Beyond financial incentives: organizational ethics and organizational integrity.

Authors:  J Goodstein; R L Potter
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  1999-12

3.  Effect of incentives on the use of indicated services in managed care.

Authors:  S Z Pantilat; M Chesney; B Lo
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  1999-03

4.  Should medical schools be schools for virtue?

Authors:  D P Sulmasy
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2000-07       Impact factor: 5.128

5.  Public response to cost-quality tradeoffs in clinical decisions.

Authors:  Mary Catherine Beach; David A Asch; Christopher Jepson; John C Hershey; Tara Mohr; Stacey McMorrow; Peter A Ubel
Journal:  Med Decis Making       Date:  2003 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 2.583

6.  The relationship between physicians and the pharmaceutical industry: ethical problems with the every-day conflict of interest.

Authors:  Richard L Allman
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  2003-06

Review 7.  The ethics and reality of rationing in medicine.

Authors:  Leslie P Scheunemann; Douglas B White
Journal:  Chest       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 9.410

Review 8.  Ethics committees across a continuum of care.

Authors:  R Moss
Journal:  HEC Forum       Date:  1995-07

9.  Justice and the allocation of healthcare resources: should indirect, non-health effects count?

Authors:  Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen; Sigurd Lauridsen
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2010-08

10.  Patients' trust in their physicians: effects of choice, continuity, and payment method.

Authors:  A C Kao; D C Green; N A Davis; J P Koplan; P D Cleary
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  1998-10       Impact factor: 5.128

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.