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Regulating Self-Referrals and Other Physician Conflicts of Interest Nancy J. Moore Abstract For better or worse, the federal government is actively
regulating physician conflicts of interest, including referrals of Medicare
and Medicaid patients for health services in which physicians have a
financial interest. The government's ever-increasing role in regulating
physician conduct is a response to the profession's own failure to adequately
deal with conflict of interest problems, as well as a function of the
government's greater stake in funding clinical practice and research.
This article addresses the implications of the growing role of government
for the continuing professionalism of physicians, given that professionalism
is commonly thought to include the ability of a profession to regulate
itself in the public interest. The author describes how professional
societies and individual physicians still have a significant role to
play in regulating self-referrals and other conflicts of interest, but
that physicians must first correct serious deficiencies in their ideological
treatment of conflicts of interest. To begin, they must distinguish
between the pervasive conflicts of professional practice, which are
open, obvious, and unavoidable, and true conflict-of-interest problems,
in which the conflicts are hidden and avoidable. The article then articulates
a general approach to resolving true conflicts-of-interest problems,
borrowing doctrine from the well-developed field of legal ethics. The
article ends with an application of the general approach to physician
self-referrals, concluding that clients are often capable of informed
consent, but that physicians are well-advised to issue their own self-referral
guidelines that take into account the legitimate interests of third-party
payers like the government, at least when such interests do not clearly
conflict with the interests of patients. Size: 146 KB Although only the abstract is available on this site, a draft of the
paper
Social Science Research Network Electronic Paper Collection: http://www.ssrn.com/abstract=448700 Click here to close this window.
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