When Patients Request Specific Interventions
- 20 November 1986
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 315 (21) , 1347-1351
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm198611203152109
Abstract
The issue of rights to health care has generated considerable controversy in recent years.1 Most discussions of such rights center on broad social issues (e.g., the access of certain socioeconomic or sociocultural groups to the health care system) and not on the individual physician–patient relationship. This essay considers a different and somewhat neglected issue, that of a patient's right to a specific medical intervention in the narrower context of the physician–Patient encounter. The concern here is not patients' general claims to health care, but rather the extent to which an individual patient (having already gained access to the system) is . . .Keywords
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- Beyond Medical Paternalism and Patient Autonomy: A Model of Physician Conscience for the Physician-Patient RelationshipAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1983
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