Jonathan M Cahill, Ian Marcus Corbin, Lydia S Dugdale
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Patients Before Profits: restoring agency and mitigating moral injury in medicine.
One of the major challenges facing health-care organizations is the well-being of clinicians. The goal of this article is to show how organizations are constrained by a neoliberal logic that has imported a factory-based organizational model into health care, resulting in alienation from work, feelings of betrayal and mistrust, and ultimately moral injury for physicians. If this damage is to be repaired, we must seek to understand the organizational sickness now afflicting health care and work to restore agency and trust to health-care workers and patients alike.
期刊介绍:
Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, an interdisciplinary scholarly journal whose readers include biologists, physicians, students, and scholars, publishes essays that place important biological or medical subjects in broader scientific, social, or humanistic contexts. These essays span a wide range of subjects, from biomedical topics such as neurobiology, genetics, and evolution, to topics in ethics, history, philosophy, and medical education and practice. The editors encourage an informal style that has literary merit and that preserves the warmth, excitement, and color of the biological and medical sciences.