From:
Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
Volume 7, Number 4, December 1997
pp. 403-411 | 10.1353/ken.1997.0029
Managed care organizations can produce conflicts of obligation and conflicts of interest that may lead to problems of conscience for health care professionals. This paper provides a basis for understanding the notions of conscience and conscientious objection and offers a framework for clinicians to stake out positions grounded in personal conscience as a way for them to respond to unacceptable pressures from managers to limit services.
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