| Literature DB >> 28225701 |
Jon C Tilburt1, Megan Allyse2, Frederic W Hafferty3.
Abstract
Dr. Mehmet Oz is widely known not just as a successful media personality donning the title "America's Doctor®," but, we suggest, also as a physician visibly out of step with his profession. A recent, unsuccessful attempt to censure Dr. Oz raises the issue of whether the medical profession can effectively self-regulate at all. It also raises concern that the medical profession's self-regulation might be selectively activated, perhaps only when the subject of professional censure has achieved a level of public visibility. We argue here that the medical profession must look at itself with a healthy dose of self-doubt about whether it has sufficient knowledge of or handle on the less visible Dr. "Ozes" quietly operating under the profession's presumptive endorsement.Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28225701 DOI: 10.1001/journalofethics.2017.19.2.msoc1-1702
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMA J Ethics