Budgetary restrictions and ethical behaviours in a hospital context – evidence from general surgeons

  • Silva C
  • Sousa R
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Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to study how budgetary constraints can have ethical implications on patient treatment options.Design/methodology/approachBy applying a qualitative methodological approach (interviews) and participant observation, this paper studies the behaviour of surgeons in scenarios of financial restriction.FindingsThe empirical findings show that despite the conflict between the economy and the leges artis, surgeons maintain the ethical and deontological principles of their profession with fair rules of orientation.Practical implicationsThe importance of this study can be realised by its continuity. One of the authors is already implicated on a wider research to investigate the influence of the economic scarcity of resources on general surgeons’ ethical behaviours.Social implicationsThis paper is a contribution to understanding the rules that restrain the activities of surgeons. Politicians sometimes do not have a full understanding of the pressures that the medical profession faces in their day-to-day activities. Currently, with the addition of problems relate to COVID-19, politicians and populations seem to better understand the importance of the Serviço Nacional de Saúde (SNS), This paper hopes that this understanding will be not only a conjectural moment.Originality/valueIn conjunction with the economic recession that began in the first decade of this century, health institutions have long faced budgetary constraints that condition their material and human resources and correspondingly shape the scope of health professional activities. Until now, it has not been studied the impact of economic crises on the ethical behaviour of Portuguese surgeons. Therefore, this research is a first step and a useful contribution to understanding the rules that can restrain (or not) the ethical conduct of these health professionals.

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APA

Silva, C. P., & Sousa, R. M. de. (2021). Budgetary restrictions and ethical behaviours in a hospital context – evidence from general surgeons. European Journal of Management Studies, 26(1), 17–32. https://doi.org/10.1108/ejms-01-2021-0006

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