Doctors update moral tenets for profession
September 24th, 2008 | Published by BRAHA Editor in Alcohol and Tobacco, Medicine & Health
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By Benedict Carey - The Los Angeles Times
In his famous oath that many doctors still swear to, Hippocrates covered many of the basics of medical ethics, from “I will give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor suggest any such counsel” to “I will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and corruption.” But the father of medicine, who practiced in the fifth century BC, didn’t have to deal with HMOs, worry about how to pay for fancy imaging technology or ponder the ethics of drug company-sponsored junkets to Hawaii.
For today’s doctors who do, two medical journals recently published “Medical Professionalism in the New Millennium: A Physician Charter,” a new statement of tenets meant to galvanize doctors against what the authors view as troubling trends in modern medicine.
Among other things, physicians are urged to include patients in medical decisions; to avoid all conflicts of interest with drug companies; to fight racial discrimination; and advocate for the uninsured.
The declaration is meant as a challenge to doctors “to resist efforts to impose a corporate mentality on a profession of service to others,” writes Dr. Harold Sox, editor of the Annals of Internal Medicine, an American Medical Association journal that published the statement simultaneously with the Lancet.
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