Just Doctoring:

  Preface
  Acknowledgments

 collapse section1  The Liberal State
 The Core of Liberalism: Negative Freedom
 Liberty, Equality, and Market Impartiality
 Justice, Law, and Morality
 collapse section2  The Medical Enterprise and Medical Ethics
 The Functional Analysis of Medical Ethics
 Doctors, Patients, and Codes of Ethics
 The Medical Enterprise of the Past
 The Golden Years
 The Mature Fee-for-Practice System
 collapse section3 Medicine in the Liberal State
 Medical Ethics and Paternalism
 The End of the Golden Years
 Brave New World
 Professional Reaction to the Liberal Market
 collapse section4  Just Doctoring: Medical Ethics for the 1990s
 The Idea of Professional Ethics
 The Cooperative Liberal State
 Doctor-Patient Relations in the Liberal Community
 collapse section5  Informed Consent
 The Early Evolution of Legal Principles of Informed Consent
 Informed Consent Suits in the Liberal State
 Appropriateness Research as a Form of Informed Consent
 collapse section6  Physicians and Quality of Medical Care
 The (Short) History of Quality Assurance
 Tort Law and Quality Assurance
 The Profession's Reaction
 The Ethical Approach to Malpractice and Quality Assurance
 The Ethics of Compensation for Iatrogenic Injury
 collapse section7  The Challenge of AIDS
 The (Rather Minimal) Legal Duty to Treat
 The Ethical Duty to Treat
 Screening for HIV Infection
 Duty to Warn and the Public's Health
 Public Expenditure on AIDS Treatment
 collapse section8  Limits on Care
 The Reasons for Limits: Cost Control
 Limits on Care at the End of Life
 Rationing Organs
 Rationing, Health Insurance, and the Poor
 collapse section9  The Economic and Political Structure of Medical Practice
 Markets in Medical Care
 The Market in Medical Care: The Profits in Managed Care
 The Regulated Health Care Market in the Liberal State
 Just Doctoring, Rights, and Access to Health Care
 An Ethical Set of Health Care Institutions
 collapse section10  Concluding Thoughts: Trust and Antitrust
 The Role of the Medical Profession

 collapse sectionNotes
 Chapter 1: The Liberal State
 Chapter 2: The Medical Enterprise and Medical Ethics
 Chapter 3: Medicine in the Liberal State
 Chapter 4: Just Doctoring: Medical Ethics for the 1990s
 Chapter 5: Informed Consent
 Chapter 6: Physicians and Quality of Medical Care
 Chapter 7: The Challenge of AIDS
 Chapter 8: Limits on Care
 Chapter 9: The Economic and Political Structure of Medical Practice
 Chapter 10: Concluding Thoughts: Trust and Antitrust
 collapse sectionIndex
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 U
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 Y
 Z

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