Litcius/Paper detail

Financial Profit in Medicine: A Position Paper From the American College of Physicians

Ryan Crowley, Omar Atiq, David Hilden, Omar Atiq, David Hilden, Micah Beachy, Heather Brislen, William Curry, Menaka Dhingra, Lee Engel, Tracey L. Henry, Matthew Hollon, Suja Mathew, Christiana Shoushtari, Molly Southworth, Michael Tan

2021Annals of Internal Medicine43 citationsDOI

Abstract

The steady growth of corporate interest and influence in the health care sector over the past few decades has created a more business-oriented health care system in the United States, helping to spur for-profit and private equity investment. Proponents say that this trend makes the health care system more efficient, encourages innovation, and provides financial stability to ensure access and improve care. Critics counter that such moves favor profit over care and erode the patient-physician relationship. American College of Physicians (ACP) underscores that physicians are permitted to earn a reasonable income as long as they are fulfilling their fiduciary responsibility to provide high-quality, appropriate care within the guardrails of medical professionalism and ethics. In this position paper, ACP considers the effect of mergers, integration, private equity investment, nonprofit hospital requirements, and conversions from nonprofit to for-profit status on patients, physicians, and the health care system.

Topics & Concepts

FiduciaryHealth careMedicineEquity (law)FinancePosition (finance)Private equityFor profitBusinessEconomicsEconomic growthDutyPolitical scienceLawHealthcare cost, quality, practicesHealthcare Policy and ManagementPrimary Care and Health Outcomes