The ethics of selectively marketing the health maintenance organization

Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 11 (4) (1990)
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Abstract

Health Maintenance Organization (HMO) administrators have been accused of engaging in selective marketing. That is, through such strategies as tailoring the benefits package of the program or advertising in styles or in media that do not appeal to certain undesirable audiences, the administrator can minimize the percentage of persons in the HMO who are heavy users of health care services.By means of analyzing what insurance is (philosophically) and what it means for something to be a free market commodity, the author argues that, as long as American society chooses to regard health insurance as a commodity or service of the free market, the use of such strategies is within the moral rights of health administrators.

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Mark Waymack
Loyola University, Chicago

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