Literature DB >> 11368201

Medical ethos and social responsibility in clinical medicine.

C K Francis1.   

Abstract

The medical profession will face many challenges in the new millenium. As medicine looks forward to advances in molecular genetics and the prospect of unprecedented understanding of the causes and cures of human disease, clinicians, scientists, and bioethicists may benefit from reflection on the origins of the medical ethos and its relevance to postmodern medicine. Past distortions of the medical ethos, such as Nazism and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, as well as more recent experience with the ethical challenges of employer-based, market-driven managed care, provide important lessons as medicine contemplates the future. Racial and ethnic disparities in health status and access to care serve as reminders that the racial doctrines that fostered the horrors of the Holocaust and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study have not been removed completely from contemporary thinking. Inequalities in health status based on race and ethnicity, as well as socioeconomic status, attest to the inescapable reality of racism in America. When viewed against a background of historical distortions and disregard for the traditional tenets of the medical ethos, persistent racial and ethnic disparities in health and the prospect of genetic engineering raise the specter of discrimination because of genotype, a postmodern version of "racist medicine" or of a "new eugenics." There is a need to balance medicine's devotion to the well-being of the patient and the primacy of the patient-physician relationship against the need to meet the health care needs of society. The challenge facing the medical profession in the new millennium is to establish an equilibrium between the responsibility to ensure quality health care for the individual patient while effecting societal changes to achieve "health for all."

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11368201      PMCID: PMC3456207          DOI: 10.1093/jurban/78.1.29

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Urban Health        ISSN: 1099-3460            Impact factor:   3.671


  40 in total

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Authors:  S Smith; M Freeland; S Heffler; D McKusick
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3.  The American health care system. Health insurance coverage.

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Review 4.  Ethical issues in health care rationing.

Authors:  M Goodman
Journal:  Nurs Manag (Harrow)       Date:  1998-07

5.  The American health care system--expenditures.

Authors:  J K Iglehart
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1999-01-07       Impact factor: 91.245

6.  Ethics and managed care: reconstructing a system and refashioning a society.

Authors:  E H Loewy; R S Loewy
Journal:  Arch Intern Med       Date:  1998 Dec 7-21

7.  Clinical loyalties and the social purposes of medicine.

Authors:  M G Bloche
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1999-01-20       Impact factor: 56.272

8.  National health expenditures in 1997: more slow growth.

Authors:  K Levit; C Cowan; B Braden; J Stiller; A Sensenig; H Lazenby
Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)       Date:  1998 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 6.301

9.  Asklepios: ancient hero of medical caring.

Authors:  J E Bailey
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1996-01-15       Impact factor: 25.391

10.  The effect of race and sex on physicians' recommendations for cardiac catheterization.

Authors:  K A Schulman; J A Berlin; W Harless; J F Kerner; S Sistrunk; B J Gersh; R Dubé; C K Taleghani; J E Burke; S Williams; J M Eisenberg; J J Escarce
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1999-02-25       Impact factor: 91.245

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  4 in total

1.  The Tuskegee Study of Untreated Syphilis and public perceptions of biomedical research: a focus group study.

Authors:  Benjamin R Bates; Tina M Harris
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 1.798

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Authors:  Benjamin R Bates
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2005

3.  Disparities in health information quality across the rural-urban continuum: where is coded data more reliable?

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Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 4.460

Review 4.  A New Ethical Challenge for Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)/Ethics Committees (ECs) in the Assessment of Pediatric Clinical Trials.

Authors:  Klaus Rose; Hans Kummer
Journal:  Children (Basel)       Date:  2015-05-28
  4 in total

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