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Home > Legalities and Informatics > Medical Ethics > Ethics of Practice > Introduction |
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Ethics of Practice |
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The changing practice environment Many individual persons, groups and institutions play a role in and are affected by medical decision making in the current practice environment. Tension and competition among the interests of clinicians, insurers, patients and institutions for available social and health care resources unavoidably influence the patient-physician relationship. |
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Although this section of the Manual will focus
specifically on the obligations of physicians in this changing context, it is
essential to note that others, such as insurers and health
care institutions, bear responsibility for ensuring that the
fundamental ethical commitment between physicians and patients
is not undermined. The patient-physician relationship and
the principles that govern it should be central to the
delivery of care. These principles include beneficence,
honesty, confidentiality, privacy and advocacy when patients'
interests may be endangered by arbitrary, unjust, or
inadequately individualized institutional procedures. Health
care, however, does take place in a broader context beyond the
patient-physician relationship. A patient's preferences or
interests may conflict with the interests or values of the
physician, an institution, a payer, other members of a managed
care plan who have equal claim to the same health care
resources, or society. The physician's first and primary duty
is to the patient.
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