Literature DB >> 11405593

The medical ethos and social responsibility in clinical medicine.

C K Francis1.   

Abstract

The medical profession will face many challenges in the new millennium. 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 upon 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 a reminders that the racial doctrines that fostered the horrors of the Holocaust and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study have not been completely removed 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 and 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 wellbeing of the patient and the primacy of the patient-physician relationship against with 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 assure quality health care for the individual patient while affecting societal changes to achieve "health for all."

Entities:  

Keywords:  Biomedical and Behavioral Research; Health Care and Public Health; Tuskegee Syphilis Study

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11405593      PMCID: PMC2593974     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc        ISSN: 0027-9684            Impact factor:   1.798


  36 in total

1.  Marginal medicine.

Authors:  R D Lamm
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1998-09-09       Impact factor: 56.272

2.  The next ten years of health spending: what does the future hold? The Health Expenditures Projection Team.

Authors:  S Smith; M Freeland; S Heffler; D McKusick
Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)       Date:  1998 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 6.301

3.  Managing care--should we adopt a new ethic?

Authors:  J P Kassirer
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1998-08-06       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Primary care: core values. Core values in a changing world.

Authors:  I R McWhinney
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1998-06-13

5.  Care of the medical ethos: reflections on Social Darwinism, racial hygiene, and the Holocaust.

Authors:  J A Barondess
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1998-12-01       Impact factor: 25.391

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

Review 7.  Does bedside rationing violate patients' best interests? An exploration of "moral hazard".

Authors:  P A Ubel; S Goold
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  1998-01       Impact factor: 4.965

8.  Doctors and ethics, morals and manuals.

Authors:  E D Pellegrino; A Caplan; S D Goold
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1998-04-01       Impact factor: 25.391

9.  Managed care: false and real solutions.

Authors:  D W Light
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1994-10-29       Impact factor: 79.321

10.  The increasing disparity in mortality between socioeconomic groups in the United States, 1960 and 1986.

Authors:  G Pappas; S Queen; W Hadden; G Fisher
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1993-07-08       Impact factor: 91.245

View more
  7 in total

Review 1.  Ethnicity/race, ethics, and epidemiology.

Authors:  Arthur L Whaley
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  2003-08       Impact factor: 1.798

2.  [Limited access to the international medical literature in Russia].

Authors:  Sergei V Jargin
Journal:  Wien Med Wochenschr       Date:  2012-06-12

3.  Senator Bill Frist and the medical jeremiad.

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

4.  Developing capacity to protect human research subjects in a post-conflict, resource-constrained setting: procedures and prospects.

Authors:  S B Kennedy; A O Harris; E Oudemans; L Young; J Kollie; E S Nelson; R A Nisbett; C Morris; N Bartee; E George-Williams; J Jones
Journal:  J Med Ethics       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 2.903

5.  Strategies for recruiting Middle Eastern-American young adults for physical activity research: a case of snowballs and Salaam.

Authors:  David Kahan; Alia Al-Tamimi
Journal:  J Immigr Minor Health       Date:  2008-01-23

6.  Responsibility and confidence: Identifying barriers to advanced pharmacy practice.

Authors:  Grace Elisabeth Charlotte Frankel; Zubin Austin
Journal:  Can Pharm J (Ott)       Date:  2013-05

7.  Academic Debate: Publications Which Promote Political Agendas Have no Place in Scientific and Medical Journals, and Academics Should Refrain from Publishing in Such Journals.

Authors:  Shimon Glick; A Mark Clarfield; Rael D Strous; Richard Horton
Journal:  Rambam Maimonides Med J       Date:  2015-01-29
  7 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.