Medical ethical issues confront physicians daily. Most of us contemplate ponderous ethical dilemmas, such as end-of-life care care, allocation of the limited supply of organs for transplant or our unequal access to health care. Many ethical decision points are rather quotidian, not situations that would serve as content for bioethical conferences. Here are some examples of everyday ethical issues that physicians deal with. A patient asks his doctor to support a claim for disability that is not warranted. A patient asks his gastroenterologist to change his constipation diagnosis after the fact so that his colonoscopy is covered more fully by the insurance company. An employee in a doctor’s office, whose own doctor is booked solid, requests an antibiotic prescription for a urinary tract infection from her physician boss. A physician falsely claims to an insurance company that he has tried certain medicines on a patient in order to gain approval of a desired m...
MD Whistleblower presents vignettes and commentaries on the medical profession. We peek 'behind the medical curtain' and deliver candor and controversy in every post.