Jj. Kronenfeld, New trends in the doctor-patient relationship: Impacts of managed care on the growth of a consumer protections model, SOCIOL SPEC, 21(3), 2001, pp. 293-317
Managed care is prompting a large revision not only in the ways doctors are
employed and paid but also in the essence of the relationship between doct
ors and patients. In medical sociology, a discipline with a long-standing f
ocus on scrutinizing the role of both the physician and the patient, there
has already been discussion of a shift from the doctor as more all knowing
to a less dominant position vis-a-vis both the patient and delivery of care
. Patients are aware of shifts that place physicians in an environment char
acterized by new roles and responsibilities, such as acting as a gatekeeper
. Limitations on health care coverage and the rethinking of roles have led
to a depiction of the patient as the consumer of care and the managed care
plan's becoming the commercial enterprise from which a service is obtained.
The model of the patient as consumer of medically related goods and servic
es appears to be growing, as does a model of the physician as one who contr
acts for a specified range of services for specific patients. In this artic
le, trends in and problems with contemporary managed care are raised. Calls
for patients' rights legislation may be among the health trends of the new
millennium.