On Being a Doctor
Medicine as a Moral Enterprise
Medicine is, at its centre, a moral enterprise
grounded in a covenant of trust. This covenant obliges physicians to be
competent
and to use their competence in the patient's best
interests. Physicians, therefore, are both intellectually and morally
obliged
to act as advocates for the sick wherever their
welfare is threatened and for their health at all times.
Today this covenant of trust is significantly
threatened. From within, there is growing legitimation of the
physician's materialistic
self-interest; from without, for-profit forces pres
the physician into the role of commercial agent to enhance the
profitability
of health care organizations. Such distortions of
the physician's responsibility degrade the physician-patient
relationship
that is the central element and structure of
clinical care. To capitulate to these alterations of the trust
relationship
is to significantly alter the physician's role as
healer, carer, helper, and advocate for the sick and for the health of
all.
By its tradition and very nature, medicine is a
special kind of human activity - one that cannot be pursued effectively
without
the virtues of humility, honesty, intellectual
integrity, compassion, and effacement of excessive self-interest. These
traits
mark physicians as members of a moral community
dedicated to something other than its own self-interest.
Our first obligation must be to serve the good of
those persons who seek our help and trust us to provide it. Physicians,
as physicians, are not, and must never be,
commercial entrepreneurs, gateclosers, or agents of fiscal policy that
runs counter
to our trust. Any defection from primary of the
patient's well-being places the patient at risk by treatment that may
compromise
quality of or access to medical care.
We believe the medical profession must reaffirm the
primary of its obligation to the patient through national, state, and
local professional societies; our academic
research, and hospital organizations; and especially through personal
behavior.
As advocates for the promotion of health and
support of the sick, we are called upon to discuss, defend, and
promulgate medical
care by every ethical means available. Only by
caring and advocating for the patient can the integrity of our
profession
be affirmed. Thus we honor our covenant of trust
with patients.