Two years ago, I published a blog commentary about what I now call the"social justice revolution" in medicine. I wrote about about what-not too long ago-was a simple two person transaction between physician and patient and some aspects of the path taken to the current situation where a number  of  major physician organizations ( e.g. AMA,ACP) and medical education bodies ( e.g. ACGME) swear allegiance to the concept of social justice. inculcate trainees  with its mantra and charge the physician with a greater task, that of working towards social justice . With the passage of the health care deconstruction-reconstruction bill we see those organizations taking public pride in the role in moving towards the goal of social justice in the area of health care.
Here is what I said then, slightly edited and brought up to date:
In  the not too distant past, but well before the current generation of  medical students and house officers  went   to college,  a person in the United states   might go to a physician with some medical problem and be charged for the  medical services and then pay for the service either  out of pocket or  pay and then file with an insurer to get or all some of that reimbursed.  It was a private transaction between two persons in a country in which  private transaction between individuals was so normal as to not attract   any attention. The ethics or justice of such a transaction was simply  not a topic for discourse.
In this not too distant past, the  ethics of the medical profession was generally well defined and  could  be expressed in a few simple sentences and seemed to be firmly imprinted  in the physician's mind as part of the transition process from a lay  person to a physician.
It was about respect for autonomy, beneficence, and non-maleficence.  It was all about the physician and the patient-do no harm, act in the  patient's best interest and respect the patient's views and wishes . It  was a  two party deal, with the physician fulfilling a fiduciary duty to the patient.
The AMA 's 2001 published  version of  the ethical principles is a bit more detailed  but contained little to  be contentious  about and does not contain the word  "justice". More on  that latter.
Later, a fourth major principle was grafted on the  the ethical framework. Justice was the new kid on the block. In the  beginning, there was more than a little  ambiguity in this term as there are more than one   definition of justice. It became quite clear what was mean by  justice with the publication of the Medical Professionalism in the New  Millennium.A Physician Charter.( Annals of Internal Medicine 5 Feb.  2002, vol 136 pg 243-246.)
The  justice to which physicians were admonished to strive was social justice. Thomas Sowell makes  the distinction between the traditional American society's version of  justice and social justice in this way. On the one hand, we have justice  as basically applying the same rules and standards to everyone  -equality of opportunity or equality under the law. On the other hand,  we have the redressing of those inequalities that proponents  characterize as the fault of society-equality of outcome.  In the  latter, whatever characteristics  at issue are thought to be unequally  "distributed" between various groups (income,medical care,access to  swimming pools) should be "redistributed". Whatever may have been  distributed by acts of God, accidents of history, an uncaring society ,  or whatever, to achieve social justice someone or something  needs to  correct the maldistribution. When redistribution is needed, someone or something has to make it happen and  force or  the threat of it is required.I am aware of no third way.
Making  everything right would appear to be quite a task to assign to busy,  practicing  physicians so there was little surprise by the results of a  survey,that I talk about here,  that indicated that concern for social justice did not take up a large  amount of a physician's times or enter heavily into his daily clinical  decisions and activities.
Not only it is quite a task, proponents  of new professionalism  tell us in August 2007 JAMA    article  that after "further reading" of the tenets of the new  professionalism they realized that physicians alone could not   do it by themselves. So who should do it?  We are told it should be a medical  societal alliance. My translation is that again we told medicine  is far too important to be left to the individual patient and the  individual physician and we need more powerful players, probably the  government,possibly big insurance and well connected medical academic  intellectuals such as those who write such articles to mobilize things  and makes the inequities right.
Thomas Sowell writes about a  "moralistic approach to public policy" in the concluding section of his  book, "Knowledge and Decisions". I characterize the authors of the New  Medical Professionalism with their insistence of physician's allegiance  to social justice - in a society where there is no dominant secular view  of justice at all-as medical  moralists.
In Sowell's section entitled "Embattled  Freedom" we read ...The desire  for freedom and its opposite,power, are as universal as any human  attributes....The moralistic approach to public policy is not merely a  political advantage for those seeking concentration of power. Moralism  in itself implies a concentration of power...The reach of national political power into every nook and cranny  has proceed in step with campaigns for greater "social justice".
The  recent, at-times heated,discussions (see here  for some links) about the ethics of retainer practices illustrate how  the concept of social justice as an alleged medical ethical imperative  as promulgated by the medical moralists has framed the discussion and   attempts to control the dialog.
With the passage of the health care bill and the  massive uncertainty about  the bill's meaning some fear for the future not only of retainer practices but more broadly of the individual's prerogative to seek out and pay for her own care.
In a world  in which talk about equality of outcome and fairness seemed to have achieved a rhetorical prominence and a position allegedly above further discussion, can  better or more medical care for those who can afford it be allowed?   See here for the beginning of a commentary about that and here for  a discussion  about the likely origins of the bill.
If and when the option  of  individual prerogative is excluded it will not be the result of a vigorous national debate but  its components will quietly  be chipped away by sundry bureaucratic entities that have emerged almost unseen from the  seemingly endless,mild numbing  and intentionally indeterminate verbiage of the health care bill.  To the extent that any debate at all occurs I doubt that those of us who hang on the notion of individual freedom and the right to pay for one's own medical care  will find support from the major medical professional organizations who supported the bill
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