Medicine's changing economics have already fundamentally, permanently
altered the relationship between physician and patient, E. Haavi Morreim
argues. Physicians must weigh a patient's interests against the
legitimate, competing claims of other patients, of payers, of society as
a whole, and sometimes even of the physician himself.
Focusing on actual situations in the clinical setting, Morreim explores
the complex moral problems that current economic realities pose for the
practicing physician. She redefines the moral obligations of both
physicians and patients, traces the specific effects of these redefined
obligations on clinical practice, and explores the implications for
patients as individuals and for national health policy. Although the
book focuses on health care in the United States, physicians everywhere
are likely to face many of the same basic issues of clinical ethics,
because every system of health care financing and distribution today is
constrained by finite resources.