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Occupational medicine: the case for reform

The specialty of occupational medicine is in peril, in large part because of its reliance on financing by industry, which has powerful incentives to limit costs and to favor physicians who are useful to their employers. Occupational physicians generally practice within the framework of the workers&#...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:American journal of preventive medicine 2005-05, Vol.28 (4), p.396-402
Main Author: LaDou, Joseph
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The specialty of occupational medicine is in peril, in large part because of its reliance on financing by industry, which has powerful incentives to limit costs and to favor physicians who are useful to their employers. Occupational physicians generally practice within the framework of the workers' compensation system. Serious flaws in the incentive structure of workers' compensation constrain objectivity in their practice. Under present law they are unavoidably subject to perverse influences from employers and insurance companies. A fundamental reform of workers' compensation law and practice is urgently needed to separate occupational physicians from the control of employers and workers' compensation insurers, whose interests should not be allowed to override the physicians' integrity or to compromise the specialty.
ISSN:0749-3797
DOI:10.1016/j.amepre.2004.12.016