Ed. Pellegrino, The commodification of medical and health care: The moral consequences of a paradigm shift from a professional to a market ethic, J MED PHIL, 24(3), 1999, pp. 243-266
Commodification of health care is a central tenet of managed care as it fun
ctions in the United States. As a result, price, cost, quality, availabilit
y, and distribution of health care are increasingly left to the workings of
the competitive marketplace. This essay examines the conceptual, ethical,
and practical implications of commodification, particularly as it affects t
he healing relationship between health professionals and their patients. It
concludes that health care is not a commodity, that treating it as such is
deleterious to the ethics of patient care, and that health is a human good
that a good society has an obligation to protect from the market ethos.