Perhaps there was a time when professional ethics alone gave
health care a sufficient moral compass. If so, that time has passed.
The fate of patients and the public's health depends now on interactions
so complex that no single profession can credibly declare that its own
code of ethics is enough. We think that we need an ethical code to cover
everybody involved in health care, and we have embarked on the search
for such a code.
Consider the following cases.
A
doctor working in an NHS trust thinks it wrong that his patients will
be denied a new treatment for cancer—despite the hospital formulary
committee deciding that it should not be prescribed. Should he contact
the local media? Should the trust punish him if he does?
A
staff surgeon employed full time by a not for profit health maintenance
organisation develops an approach to postoperative pain control for a
surgical procedure that shortens average length of stay by 1.5 days. Is
she ethically obliged to share information of her discovery with the
world?
A British general practice that plans to become a
fundholding practice deliberately keeps its prescribing costs high for a
year so that it will receive a bigger budget in its first year as a
fundholder (the budget is based on the previous year's activity). Is
this defrauding other practices and health organisations or doing the
best by the patients in the practice?
A health
maintenance organisation considers investing in improvements in its
system for caring for AIDS patients. The vice president for marketing
warns that such improvements may lead to selective enrolment of
unprofitable HIV positive members. Is the organisation ethically bound
to improve its HIV care, even if that …
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