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The values and ethical commitments of doctors engaging in macroallocation: a qualitative and evaluative analysis.

Siun GallagherMiles LittleClaire Hooker
Published in: BMC medical ethics (2018)
Our findings suggest new ways of understanding how doctors' values might have procedural and substantive impacts on macroallocation, and challenge the prevailing assumption that doctors in this milieu are motivated primarily by deontological considerations. Our empirical bioethics approach enabled us to identify an ethical framework for medical work in macroallocation that was grounded in the values and ethical intuitions of doctors engaged in actions of distributive justice. The concordance between Ricoeur's 'little ethics' and macroallocation practitioners' experiences, and its embrace of mutuality, suggest that it has the potential to guide practice, support ethical reflection, and harmonise deliberative practices amongst actors in macroallocation generally.
Keyphrases
  • primary care
  • medical students
  • healthcare
  • decision making
  • public health
  • big data
  • mental illness
  • general practice