Dirty Hands: The Underside of Marketplace Health Care
- 1 September 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Advances in Nursing Science
- Vol. 19 (1) , 28-37
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00012272-199609000-00005
Abstract
The ethos of the corporation and the urgency for profit maximization place pressures on health care corporations to act in a way that may be incompatible with ethical practice. Profit-driven incentives often result in corporate deviance and criminal behavior. Nurses may be pressured to go along with schemes that may be unethical or illegal and because of shaky job markets may be unable to adhere to professional ethical guidelines. Recent events in health care are drawn on to argue that ethical theory and research must begin to consider the issue of moral compromise of professionals as a result of deviant organizational environments.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Extreme Risk — The New Corporate Proposition for PhysiciansNew England Journal of Medicine, 1995
- A Perspective on the Corporate Transformation of Health CareInternational Journal of Health Services, 1995
- The private psychiatric hospital scandal: A critical social approachArchives of Psychiatric Nursing, 1994
- Mental health monopoly: Corporate trends in mental health servicesSocial Science & Medicine, 1989
- The New Medical-Industrial ComplexNew England Journal of Medicine, 1980