The Changing Health Care Landscape and Implications of Organizational Ethics on Modern Medical Practice

Publication date

2017-06-01

Authors

Castlen, Joseph P
Cote, David J
Moojen, Wouter A.
Robe, Pierre AORCID 0000-0001-7845-6196
Balak, Naci
Brennum, Jannick
Ammirati, Mario
Mathiesen, Tiit
Broekman, MariekeISNI 0000000394030739

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Introduction Medicine is rapidly changing, both in the level of collective medical knowledge and in how it is being delivered. The increased presence of administrators in hospitals helps to facilitate these changes and ease administrative workloads on physicians; however, tensions sometimes form between physicians and administrators. Analysis This situation is based on perceptions from both sides that physicians obstruct cost-saving measures and administrators put profits before patients. In reality, increasing patient populations and changes in health care are necessitating action by hospitals to prevent excessive spending as health care systems become larger and more difficult to manage. Recognizing the cause of changes in health care, which do not always originate with physicians and administrators, along with implementing changes in hospitals such as increased physician leadership, could help to ease tensions and promote a more collaborative atmosphere. Ethically, there is a need to preserve physician autonomy, which is a tenet of medical professionalism, and a need to rein in spending costs and ensure that patients receive the best possible care. Conclusion Physicians and administrators both need to have a well-developed personal ethic to achieve these goals. Physicians need be allowed to retain relative autonomy over their practices as they support and participate in administrator-led efforts toward distributive justice.

Keywords

Administration, Ethical climate, Hospital, Leadership, Organizational ethics, Quality management, Taverne, Surgery, Clinical Neurology, Journal Article, Review

Citation

Castlen, J P, Cote, D J, Moojen, W A, Robe, P A, Balak, N, Brennum, J, Ammirati, M, Mathiesen, T & Broekman, M L D 2017, 'The Changing Health Care Landscape and Implications of Organizational Ethics on Modern Medical Practice', World Neurosurgery, vol. 102, pp. 420-424. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wneu.2017.03.073