• Bioethics · Jun 2009

    Review

    Administrative gatekeeping - a third way between unrestricted patient advocacy and bedside rationing.

    • Sigurd Lauridsen.
    • University of Copenhagen, Unit of Medical Philosophy and Clinical Theory, Institute of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Panum Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark. S.lauridsen@pubhealth.ku.dk
    • Bioethics. 2009 Jun 1;23(5):311-20.

    AbstractThe inevitable need for rationing of healthcare has apparently presented the medical profession with the dilemma of choosing the lesser of two evils. Physicians appear to be obliged to adopt either an implausible version of traditional professional ethics or an equally problematic ethics of bedside rationing. The former requires unrestricted advocacy of patients but prompts distrust, moral hazard and unfairness. The latter commits physicians to rationing at the bedside; but it is bound to introduce unfair inequalities among patients and lack of political accountability towards citizens. In this paper I shall argue that this dilemma is false, since a third intermediate alternative exists. This alternative, which I term 'administrative gatekeeping', makes it possible for physicians to be involved in rationing while at the same time being genuine advocates of their patients. According to this ideal, physicians are required to follow fair rules of rationing adopted at higher organizational levels within healthcare systems. At the same time, however, they are prohibited from including considerations of cost in their clinical decisions.

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