Addressing the consequences of the corporatization of reproductive medicine

Author:

Attinger Sara A12ORCID,Jackson Emily3ORCID,Karpin Isabel4,Kerridge Ian125,Newson Ainsley J1ORCID,Stewart Cameron6,van de Wiel Lucy7,Lipworth Wendy12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine and Health, Sydney School of Public Health, Sydney Health Ethics, The University of Sydney , Sydney, Australia

2. Department of Philosophy, Macquarie University , Macquarie Park, Australia

3. Law School, London School of Economics and Political Science , UK

4. Faculty of Law, University of Technology Sydney , Australia

5. Haematology Department, Royal North Shore Hospital , St Leonards, Australia

6. Sydney Health Law, Sydney Law School, University of Sydney , Sydney, Australia

7. Department of Global Health & Social Medicine, Kings College London , UK

Abstract

Abstract In Australia and the UK, commercialization and corporatization of assisted reproductive technologies have created a marketplace of clinics, products, and services. While this has arguably increased choice for patients, ‘choice’, shaped by commercial imperatives may not mean better-quality care. At present, regulation of clinics (including clinic–corporations) and clinicians focuses on the doctor–patient dyad and the clinic–consumer dyad. Scant attention has been paid to the conflicts between the clinic–corporation’s duty to its shareholders and investors, the medical profession’s duty to the corporations within which they practice, and the obligations of both clinicians and corporations to patients and to health systems. Frameworks of regulation based in corporate governance and business ethics, such as stakeholder models and ‘corporate social responsibility’, have well-recognized limits and may not translate well into healthcare settings. This means that existing governance frameworks may not meet the needs of patients or health systems. We argue for the development of novel regulatory approaches that more explicitly characterize the obligations that both corporations and clinicians in corporate environments have to patients and to society, and that promote fulfilment of these obligations. We consider mechanisms for application in the multi-jurisdictional setting of Australia, and the single jurisdictional settings of the UK.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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