950 THE AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW
divorced
from
self-interest. (3) It is at least claimed that
treatment
is
dictated
by
the
objective
needs of
the case
and not
limited
by
financial
considerations."7
While the ethical compulsion is surely not
as absolute
in
fact as it
is in
theory, we can hardly suppose that it has
no influence
over
resource allocation in this area. Charity treatment in
one form
or
another does
exist because
of
this tradition about human
rights to ade-
quate medical care.'8 (4) The physician is relied on as
an expert
in
certifying
to
the existence of illnesses and injuries for various
legal
and
other
purposes. It
is
socially expected that his concern for the correct
conveying
of
information will, when appropriate, outweigh his desire
to
please
his
customers."g
Departure from the profit motive is strikingly
manifested by the
overwhelming predominance
of
nonprofit
over
proprietary
hospitals.20
The
hospital per
se offers services
not too different from
those of
a
hotel,
and it is
certainly
not obvious
that the profit motive
will not lead
to a
more efficient
supply.
The
explanation may
lie
either on the
supply
side or on
that
of
demand.
The
simplest explanation
is
that
public
and
private subsidies decrease the cost to the patient in
nonprofit hospitals.
A
second
possibility
is
that
the association of
profit-making
with the
supply
of
medical services
arouses
suspicion
and
antagonism
on
the
part
of
patients
and
referring physicians,
so
they
do
prefer
nonprofit
institutions.
Either
explanation implies
a
preference
on
the
part
of
some
group, whether
donors or
patients, against
the
profit
motive in the
supply
of
hospital
services.2'
1T The
belief that the ethics of
medicine demands treatment
independent of the patient's
ability to
pay is strongly ingrained.
Such a perceptive observer as
Rene Dubos has made
the
remark that
the
high
cost
of
anticoagulants restricts their use
and may contradict
classical
medical ethics,
as
though this
were an unprecedented
phenomenon.
See
[13,
p.
4191.
"A
time
may
come when medical
ethics will have to be
considered in the harsh
light of
economics" (emphasis added).
Of course, this expectation
amounts to ignoring
the
scarcity
of medical
resources;
one
has
only
to
have
been
poor
to
realize the error.
We
may
confidently
assume
that
price
and
income do
have some
consequences for
medical
expenditures.
18A
needed
piece
of
research
is a
study
of the
exact nature of
the
variations of medical
care
received
and medical
care
paid
for as
income
rises.
(The
relevant
income
concept
also
needs
study.)
For this
purpose,
some
disaggregation
is
needed;
differences in
hospital
care which
are essentially
matters
of
comfort
should,
in
the above
view, be much
more
responsive to
income
than, e.g., drugs.
"9 This role is
enhanced in a socialist
society,
where the
state itself is
actively concerned
with illness
in relation to
work;
see
Field
[14,
Ch.
91.
'
About
3 per
cent
of beds were
in
proprietary hospitals
in
1958, against
30 per
cent
in
voluntary
nonprofit,
and the remainder in
federal, state,
and
local
hospitals;
see
[26,
Chart
4-2,
p.
601.
"
C.
R.
Rorem
has
pointed
out
to me some
further factors
in
this
analysis. (1)
Given
the
social intention of
helping
all
patients
without
regard
to immediate
ability
to
pay,
economies
of scale would dictate a
predominance
of
community-sponsored
hospitals. (2)