Wednesday, August 7, 2013

"Quality care cannot be provided by a healthcare delivery system in which kickbacks and bribery are a part of life."

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23912727


 2013 Jul-Sep;10(3):153-9.

Corruption in healthcare and medicine: Why should physicians and bioethicists care and what should they do?

Source

Professor, Department of Physiology, College of Medicine and JNM Hospital, West Bengal University of Health Sciences*, Kalyani, Nadia 741 235, West Bengal, INDIA email: linkdrsc@yahoo.com, linkdrsc@gmail.com.

Abstract

Corruption, an undeniable reality in the health sector, is arguably the most serious ethical crisis in medicine today. However, it remains poorly addressed in scholarly journals and by professional associations of physicians and bioethicists. This article provides an overview of the forms and dynamics of corruption in healthcare as well as its implications in health and medicine. Corruption traps millions of people in poverty, perpetuates the existing inequalities in income and health, drains the available resources undermines people's access to healthcare, increases the costs of patient care and, by setting up a vicious cycle, contributes to ill health and suffering. No public health programme can succeed in a setting in which scarce resources are siphoned off, depriving the disadvantaged and poor of essential healthcare. Quality care cannot be provided by a healthcare delivery system in which kickbacks and bribery are a part of life. The medical profession, historically considered a noble one, and the bioethics community cannot evade their moral responsibility in the face of this sordid reality. There is a need to engage in public discussions and take a stand - against unethical and corrupt practices in healthcare and medicine - for the sake of the individual's well-being as well as for social good.

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