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  1. Does professional autonomy protect medical futility judgments?Eric Gampel - 2006 - Bioethics 20 (2):92-104.
    Despite substantial controversy, the use of futility judgments in medicine is quite common, and has been backed by the implementation of hospital policies and professional guidelines on medical futility. The controversy arises when health care professionals (HCPs) consider a treatment futile which patients or families believe to be worthwhile: should HCPs be free to refuse treatments in such a case, or be required to provide them? Most physicians seem convinced that professional autonomy protects them from being forced to provide treatments (...)
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  • Professional autonomy: A stumbling Block for good medical practice. An analysis and interpretation.H. M. Dupuis - 2000 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 21 (5):493-502.
    In this article the various descriptions and interpretations ofprofessional autonomy, as have been given in the articles from Belgium,Italy and the UK are subjected to a further analysis. The implicit claimthat professional autonomy of physicians is beneficial for the health ofpatients is scrutinized and is proven to be untrue and invalid. Theconclusion is that professional autonomy is more directed at theinterests of physicians than of those of patients and deserves nospecial place in health care.
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  • Professional autonomy in the health care system.John J. Polder & Henk Jochemsen - 2000 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 21 (5):477-491.
    Professional autonomy interferes at a structural level with the various aspects of the health care system. The health care systems that can be distinguished all feature a specific design of professional autonomy, but experience their own governance problems. Empirical health care systems in the West are a nationally coloured blend of ideal type healthcare systems. From a normative perspective, the optimal health care system should consist of elements of all the ideal types. A workable optimum taking national values into account (...)
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