Do doctors have a moral duty to work in the public health sector? Ethical considerations regarding the social obligations of medicine

Date

2017

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Article

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Abstract

This article discusses whether physicians have social obligations and whether these obligations imply a moral duty to work in the public sector. The article focuses on the context of the Chilean health system, which has an unequal distribution of physicians to the detriment of the public sector, thus making the issue a particularly pressing one. After addressing arguments from different ethical theories and some empirical evidence, the article concludes that the physician has some social obligations in relation to a fair distribution of health resources, and that professional excellence should incorporate cultivating virtues related to social justice. In addition, it is argued that the moral duty to work in the public sector can be placed in the context of prima facie obligations which admit exceptions and allow the possibility of conflict with other professional obligations.

Description

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Citation

Aguilera B, López G. Do doctors have a moral duty to work in the public health sector? Ethical considerations regarding the social obligations of medicine. Medwave 2017 Nov-Dic;17(9):7105

Keywords

Social obligations, Medical virtues, Public sector, Health resources, Professional ethics

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