How physicians can navigate ethical conflicts when caring for patients
How physicians can navigate ethical conflicts when caring for patients
Physician's Weekly; 10/14/24
... According to the president of The Physicians Foundation, Gary Price, MD, ethics in medical care are particularly complicated regarding end-of-life choices. While decades ago, a patient’s primary care provider (PCP) would have been involved in that patient’s hospitalized care and their end-of-life decisions within the hospital, the fragmented nature of today’s healthcare system has all but eliminated PCPs from involvement in hospitalized patient care. As such, patients often make end-of-life decisions based on the guidance of doctors with whom they have no pre-existing relationship. Other factors that blur ethical lines in healthcare, adds Dr. Price, are the new state of healthcare ownership and financing. Dr. Price mentions, for instance, conflicts of interest due to the US’s biggest employer of physicians, Optum, being a subsidiary of the same company that owns UnitedHealthcare. This situation allows for an insurer who controls reimbursement and who could, as the physician’s employer, influence decisions made regarding patient care. Sadly, this influence largely comes from financial concern instead of concern for the patient’s best health outcomes.