Metaphors, models and organisational ethics in health care

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Abstract

Crucial to discussions in organisational ethics is an evaluation of the metaphors and models we use to understand the organisations we are discussing. I briefly defend this contention and evaluate three possible models: the current corporate model, an orchestrator model which puts hospitals in the same class as malls and airports, and a community model. I argue that the corporate and orchestrator model push to the background some important organisational ethics issues and bias us inappropriately towards certain solutions. Furthermore, I argue that the community model allows these to be more easily brought up. I also respond to the likely challenge that hospitals really are corporations by arguing that this is not relevant to evaluations of the appropriateness of the corporate model.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

McCrickerd, J. (2000). Metaphors, models and organisational ethics in health care. Journal of Medical Ethics, 26(5), 340–345. https://doi.org/10.1136/jme.26.5.340

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