How does one maintain an ethical practice while facing the requirements and limits of a health care system that is dominated by managed care? Psychologists are increasingly raising such questions about ethical issues when working in or contracting with managed care organizations. The authors review the process involved in ethical decision making and problem solving and focus on 4 areas in which ethical dilemmas most commonly arise in a managed care context: informed consent, confidentiality, abandonment, and utilization management-utilization review. The need for sustained and organized advocacy efforts to ensure patient access to quality health care is discussed, as is the impact of managed care's competitive marketplace on professional relationships. Hypothetical examples of typical dilemmas psychologists face in the current practice environment are provided to illustrate systematic ethical decision making.
The Digit Span subtest of the Wechsler-Bellevue Scale has been considered diagnostically helpful by clinicians as an indicator of the presence of anxiety [4,7,8]. A usual procedure is to note discrepancies between the Digit Span score and that of the total Verbal Scale. Rapaport uses Vocabulary level as a comparison measure; "A Digit Span score much below the vocabulary level ... is mainly indicative of the presence of anxiety" [7, p. 193],At the same time, however, the digit score is not considered adequate in itself to identify the clinical group, anxiety-neurotic, for two reasons: (a) other clinical groups do poorly on this subtest [1 ; 11, p. 84] and (b) some anxiety neurotics do not show this differential decrement [2, 9]. One explanation of discrepant findings may lie in the unreliability of diagnostic judgments of manifest anxiety, particularly since manifestly anxious individuals may show other kinds of symptoms also.In order to investigate the hypothesis that anxiety results in a greater decrement in Digit Span scores than in Vocabulary scores it would appear reasonable to attempt to manipulate anxiety in normal subjects in a controlled situation and thus determine its effects.
ProcedureIntroductory psychology students served as subjects. All had been previously tested on the Full Scale Wechsler-Bellevue. They were selected from a group of eighty-four on the basis of their Digit Span scores not deviating more than two points from their verbal mean.Four groups of eight 5s each were matched according to Verbal IQ. The four groups were paper was presented at the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago, April 27, 1951.
For years, the demise of solo practice has been predicted as a consequence of the corporatization of health care, the rise of managed care programs, and the creation of preferred provider organizations (PPOs). The predictors of the demise are leaders in the health maintenance organization (HMO) and PPO movement and therefore have much to gain if solo practice dries up. A survey of a random sample of licensed psychologists in New Jersey was conducted to determine the current state of private practice. A 58% return of the anonymous questionnaire revealed that 87% were in solo practice; 90% were not members of any PPO; 92% received either no referrals or less than 5% from HMOs; and 92% indicated that their referral rates and practices have either stayed the same or increased in the past three years. Clearly the predictions as far as New Jersey goes are wrong! The findings are discussed in terms of economics, humanistic concerns, and political concerns.
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