Clinical loyalties and the social purposes of medicine
- PMID: 9918483
- DOI: 10.1001/jama.281.3.268
Clinical loyalties and the social purposes of medicine
Abstract
Physicians increasingly face conflicts between the ethic of undivided loyalty to patients and pressure to use clinical methods and judgment for social purposes and on behalf of third parties. The principal legal and ethical paradigms by which these conflicts are managed are inadequate, because they either deny or unsuccessfully finesse the reality of contradiction between fidelity to patients and society's other expectations of medicine. This reality needs to be more squarely acknowledged. The challenge for ethics and law is not to resolve this tension--an impossible task--but to mediate it in myriad clinical circumstances in a way that preserves the primacy of keeping faith with patients while conceding the legitimacy of society's other expectations of medicine.
Comment in
-
Exploring the ethics of clinical role conflicts.JAMA. 1999 Jul 14;282(2):132; author reply 132-3. JAMA. 1999. PMID: 10411187 No abstract available.
-
Exploring the ethics of clinical role conflicts.JAMA. 1999 Jul 14;282(2):132-3. JAMA. 1999. PMID: 10411188 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
