A disturbing number of doctors do not feel obligated to tell patients about medical options they oppose morally, such as abortion and teen birth control, and believe they have no duty to refer people elsewhere for such treatments, researchers say.
The survey of 1,144 doctors around the country is the first major look at how physicians' religious or moral beliefs might affect patients' care.
The study, conducted by University of Chicago researchers, found 86 percent of those responding believe doctors are obligated to present all treatment options, and 71 percent believe they must refer patients to another doctor for treatments they oppose. Slightly more than half the rest said they had no such obligation; the others were undecided.
"That means that there are a lot of physicians out there who are not, in fact, doing the right thing," said David Magnus, director of Stanford University's Center for Biomedical Ethics.
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The article has the following corrections:
An article about doctors personal beliefs impacting patient care published Feb. 7 stated that a study in The New England Journal of Medicine found that 14 percent of physicians believe it is acceptable to withhold information about controversial topics such as birth control, and that 29 percent feel no obligation to tell patients where they can go to get such care. In fact, the study said 8 percent of surveyed doctors believe withholding such information is acceptable, and 18 percent dont feel obligated to refer patients elsewhere for care.