| Just Doctoring: |
| Preface |
| Acknowledgments |
| 1 The Liberal State |
| • | The Core of Liberalism: Negative Freedom |
| • | Liberty, Equality, and Market Impartiality |
| • | Justice, Law, and Morality |
| 2 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 |
| 3 Medicine in the Liberal State |
| • | Medical Ethics and Paternalism |
| • | The End of the Golden Years |
| • | Brave New World |
| • | Professional Reaction to the Liberal Market |
| 4 Just Doctoring: Medical Ethics for the 1990s |
| • | The Idea of Professional Ethics |
| • | The Cooperative Liberal State |
| • | Doctor-Patient Relations in the Liberal Community |
| 5 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 |
| 6 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 |
| 7 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 |
| 8 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 |
| 9 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 |
| 10 Concluding Thoughts: Trust and Antitrust |
| • | The Role of the Medical Profession |
| Notes |
| • | 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 |
| Index |
| • | A |
| • | B |
| • | C |
| • | D |
| • | E |
| • | F |
| • | G |
| • | H |
| • | I |
| • | J |
| • | K |
| • | L |
| • | M |
| • | N |
| • | O |
| • | P |
| • | Q |
| • | R |
| • | S |
| • | T |
| • | U |
| • | V |
| • | W |
| • | Y |
| • | Z |