Literature DB >> 17136438

Towards a Confucian virtue bioethics: reframing Chinese medical ethics in a market economy.

Ruiping Fan1.   

Abstract

This essay addresses a moral and cultural challenge facing health care in the People's Republic of China: the need to create an understanding of medical professionalism that recognizes the new economic realities of China and that can maintain the integrity of the medical profession. It examines the rich Confucian resources for bioethics and health care policy by focusing on the Confucian tradition's account of how virtue and human flourishing are compatible with the pursuit of profit. It offers the Confucian account of the division of labor and the financial inequalities this produces with special attention to China's socialist project of creating the profession of barefoot doctors as egalitarian peasant physicians and why this project failed. It then further develops the Confucian acknowledgement of the unequal value of different services and products and how this conflicts with the current system of payment to physicians which has led to the corruption of medical professionalism through illegal supplementary payments. It further gives an account the oblique intentionality of Confucian moral psychology that shows how virtuous persons can pursue benevolent actions while both foreseeing profit and avoiding defining their character by greed. This account of Confucian virtue offers the basis for a medical professionalism that can function morally within a robustly profit-oriented market economy. The paper concludes with a summary of the characteristics of Confucian medical professionalism and of how it places the profit motive within its account of virtue ethics.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17136438     DOI: 10.1007/s11017-006-9023-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth        ISSN: 1386-7415


  4 in total

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Review 3.  Reconstructionist Confucianism and health care: an Asian moral account of health care resource allocation.

Authors:  Ruiping Fan
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  2002-12

4.  Truth telling in medicine: the Confucian view.

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  4 in total
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3.  Ethical Considerations for Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal Medicine Clinical Trials: A Cross-cultural Perspective.

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Journal:  Evid Based Complement Alternat Med       Date:  2008-08-21       Impact factor: 2.629

  3 in total

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