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1.
Mt Sinai J Med ; 68(3): 197-202, 2001 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11373692

ABSTRACT

Pharmaceutical industry spending on direct-to-consumer advertising has been increasing rapidly. While the primary goal of direct-to-consumer advertising is to sell drugs, supposed secondary goals include patient education and improved health. However, these benefits of direct-to-consumer advertising are unproved. Moreover, such advertising may create unnecessary tension between the patient and the patient's physician and insurer, and may divert physicians' efforts away from important patient concerns, and toward marketing-generated discussions. On the other hand, direct-to-consumer advertising may lead to patient-doctor encounters that would not have occurred otherwise. Direct-to-consumer advertising should be modified to unambiguously benefit the health-care interests of consumers and patients.


Subject(s)
Advertising , Community Participation , Consumer Advocacy , Drug Industry/economics , Ethics, Medical , Humans , Physician-Patient Relations , United States , United States Food and Drug Administration
2.
J Gen Intern Med ; 15(9): 667-72, 2000 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11029682

ABSTRACT

Physicians routinely care for patients whose ability to operate a motor vehicle is compromised by a physical or cognitive condition. Physician management of this health information has ethical and legal implications. These concerns have been insufficiently addressed by professional organizations and public agencies. The legal status in the United States and Canada of reporting of impaired drivers is reviewed. The American Medical Association's position is detailed. Finally, the Bioethics Committee of the Medical Society of the State of New York proposes elements for an ethically defensible public response to this problem.


Subject(s)
Automobile Driving/legislation & jurisprudence , Age Factors , American Medical Association , Confidentiality , Ethics, Medical , Humans , New York , Organizational Policy , Physician's Role , Psychomotor Disorders , Societies, Medical , United States
3.
Arch Intern Med ; 160(14): 2089-92, 2000 Jul 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10904450

ABSTRACT

Medical errors occur and are sometimes unavoidable. Physicians generally, but not always, have ethical and moral obligations to disclose their errors to the patient. Because common medical errors can be expected, physicians are obligated to work within health systems toward reducing systems flaws that promote errors. However, the obligations of physicians to disclose errors made by others are less clear. This article discusses the professional ethics involved in disclosing and preventing medical errors.


Subject(s)
Medical Errors/prevention & control , Physician-Patient Relations , Truth Disclosure , Ethics, Medical , Humans , Malpractice/legislation & jurisprudence , Medical Errors/classification , Medical Errors/legislation & jurisprudence , Morale , Morals , Patient Advocacy , Physician's Role , Practice Guidelines as Topic , Total Quality Management
4.
J Palliat Med ; 3(1): 69-73, 2000.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15859723

ABSTRACT

Good care for dying patients has always been an obligation in medicine. To fulfill this obligation, physicians must embrace the integralness of dying in life, must recognize when to submit to death and dying with equanimity, and must develop attentive and individualized plans of care for each patient. Approaches to care should have, at their core, a reinvigorated commitment to communication between health professionals and patients and their intimates.

10.
N Y State J Med ; 92(11): 485-8, 1992 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1488204

ABSTRACT

The term futile is used in many different ways. It is therefore difficult to decide whether a procedure or treatment such as CPR or hemodialysis or blood transfusion would be futile in a given case. The AMA's guidelines on the appropriate use of DNR orders state that DNR decisions should be made openly. Institutions should have policies and physicians should elicit the patient's preferences about CPR. For physicians, the question is no longer whether we should discuss DNR orders with our patients; instead, the issue is how to do so with compassion and caring. Physicians should share with patients their judgment about what medicine can and cannot do. Then physicians must "make decisions about when to withhold or limit resuscitation openly" in honest and trusting conversation between doctor and patient. Often CPR is an exercise in futility. The medical profession should be vested with the authority to make futility decisions if they are the product of open discussion and shared deliberation between physician and patient, family, or surrogate. Rationing, triage, and medical futility in relation to AIDS patients require careful deliberation and consideration. What was considered medically futile five years ago for an AIDS patient may be appropriate care nowadays. The need for appropriate use or non-use of life-sustaining therapy for the elderly, the terminally ill, patients with AIDS and other incurable illnesses is evident to patients, health care providers, policy makers, and the public. CPR should only be administered if it is expected to confer lasting benefit to the patient. However, if 10% of elderly patients benefit from CPR in the case of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, how can one consider this procedure futile? Although communication between physician and patient about difficult treatment limitation decisions has markedly improved in recent years, it remains a problem, largely because open dialogue with patients and families about futility is a demanding emotional and intellectual task. The medical profession is charged with setting standards for the proper implementation of judgments regarding futility.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Ethics, Medical , Refusal to Treat , Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation , Ethics Committees , Humans , New York , Refusal to Treat/legislation & jurisprudence , Resuscitation Orders/legislation & jurisprudence , Societies, Medical , Treatment Refusal
16.
J Urol ; 128(2): 348-50, 1982 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7109107

ABSTRACT

The urodynamic findings in 15 patients with voiding dysfunction associated with various forms of the ataxia syndrome were reviewed. Urodynamic studies helped segregate the patients into 3 groups: group 1-detrusor hyperreflexia, group 2-normal bladder contractility and group 3-acontractile bladder. Pelvic floor electromyography demonstrated either coordinated or uncoordinated vesicosphincteric function. Although the neurologic findings associated with the ataxia syndrome have been studied extensively the urodynamic findings have not yet been recorded. We emphasize the importance of urodynamic evaluation in the treatment of patients with ataxia and voiding dysfunction.


Subject(s)
Cerebellar Ataxia/physiopathology , Urinary Bladder/physiopathology , Urination Disorders/diagnosis , Urodynamics , Cerebellar Ataxia/complications , Electromyography , Humans , Pressure , Urination Disorders/etiology
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