Literature DB >> 10724050

Physicians' ethical beliefs about cost-control arrangements.

D P Sulmasy1, M G Bloche, J M Mitchell, J Hadley.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although much has been written about the ethics of new methods of health care financing, little is known about the extent to which physicians experience these cost-control arrangements as ethical problems.
METHOD: A cross-sectional telephone survey of 1,549 physicians, 8 to 17 years after residency, randomly selected from 75 US metropolitan service areas (response rate, 74.0%).
RESULTS: Only 17.0% believed that financial incentives to limit services are ethically acceptable. Although 52.9% thought that physicians should try to abide by guidelines discouraging the use of interventions with possible but unproven benefit, only 14.5% thought such guidelines should be enforced by payers. Only 5.7% thought that it was morally acceptable for payers to discourage physicians from telling patients about their personal financial incentives, and only 9.1% found compliance with such restrictions morally acceptable. Changes in the health care system in the past 5 years were believed to have had a negative impact on their own patients' trust in them by 50.6%, and 80.8% believed that changes in the health care system in the past decade have diminished physicians' commitment to an ethic of undivided loyalty to patients. In multiple regression analysis, physicians who reported that the overall personal financial incentives in their practices encouraged them to reduce services were significantly more likely to have ethical objections to such incentives, to believe their own patients' trust in them had diminished, and to believe that the ethic of undivided loyalty to patients had diminished.
CONCLUSIONS: Many of the methods now commonly used to influence medical decision making are considered ethically objectionable by most midcareer physicians. Whether their ethical disquiet about these arrangements is justified cannot be answered from these data.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bioethics and Professional Ethics; Empirical Approach; Health Care and Public Health; Professional Patient Relationship

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 10724050     DOI: 10.1001/archinte.160.5.649

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arch Intern Med        ISSN: 0003-9926


  6 in total

1.  Should medical schools be schools for virtue?

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

2.  The growth of managed care and changes in physicians' incomes, autonomy, and satisfaction, 1991-1997.

Authors:  Jack Hadley; Jean M Mitchell
Journal:  Int J Health Care Finance Econ       Date:  2002-03

3.  Prevalence and determinants of physician bedside rationing: data from Europe.

Authors:  Samia A Hurst; Anne-Marie Slowther; Reidun Forde; Renzo Pegoraro; Stella Reiter-Theil; Arnaud Perrier; Elizabeth Garrett-Mayer; Marion Danis
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2006-07-07       Impact factor: 5.128

Review 4.  Are physicians willing to ration health care? Conflicting findings in a systematic review of survey research.

Authors:  Daniel Strech; Govind Persad; Georg Marckmann; Marion Danis
Journal:  Health Policy       Date:  2008-12-13       Impact factor: 2.980

5.  Issues surrounding end-of-life decision-making.

Authors:  Vickram Tejwani; Yifan Wu; Sabrina Serrano; Luis Segura; Michael Bannon; Qi Qian
Journal:  Patient Prefer Adherence       Date:  2013-08-09       Impact factor: 2.711

6.  Physicians' views on resource availability and equity in four European health care systems.

Authors:  Samia A Hurst; Reidun Forde; Stella Reiter-Theil; Anne-Marie Slowther; Arnaud Perrier; Renzo Pegoraro; Marion Danis
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2007-08-31       Impact factor: 2.655

  6 in total

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