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- Thalia Margalit Krakower, Martha Montello, Christine Mitchell, and Robert D Truog.
- Harvard Medical School, Boston, USA. thalia.margalit@gmail.com
- J Clin Ethics. 2013 Jan 1; 24 (1): 50-7.
AbstractReality medical television, an increasingly popular genre, depicts private medical moments between patients and healthcare providers. Journalists aim to educate and inform the public, while the participants in their documentaries-providers and patients-seek to heal and be healed. When journalists and healthcare providers work together at the bedside, moral problems precipitate. During the summer of 2010, ABC aired a documentary, Boston Med, featuring several Boston hospitals. We examine the ethical issues that arise when journalism and medicine intersect. We provide a framework for evaluating the potential benefits and harms of reality medical television, highlighting critical issues such as informed consent, confidentiality, and privacy.
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