Skip to main content
Clinical Medicine logoLink to Clinical Medicine
. 2008 Apr 1;8(2):182–185. doi: 10.7861/clinmedicine.8-2-182

Choice and responsibility in the NHS

Robin Downie 1, Fiona Randall 2
PMCID: PMC4953005  PMID: 18478868

Abstract

Patient choice is becoming the centre of health policy in the UK and other countries. But there is ambiguity about what choice means. As the term is used in everyday life, choice is the foundation of the doctrine of patient consent. The doctor is responsible for choosing appropriate treatment, and the patient is responsible for choosing (for consenting to or refusing) what is offered and accepts responsibility for that choice. That simple and ethically acceptable doctrine is being replaced politically by consumerist choice. But consumerism in healthcare is incompatible with a publicly funded service. Moreover, consumerism changes the locus of responsibility from the doctor to the consumer (the patient). The doctor will cease to have the values of a professional and will become simply an agent of the patient's demands.

KEY WORDS: choice, consumerism, equity, motivation, professionalism, responsibility

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (152.0 KB).


Articles from Clinical Medicine are provided here courtesy of Royal College of Physicians

RESOURCES