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Volume 336:508-509 February 13, 1997 Number 7
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Learning to Accentuate the Positive in Managed Care

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Managed care scares me, but with patients enrolled in health maintenance organizations (HMOs) now making up a quarter of my internal-medicine practice, I've found it essential to think positive thoughts. This often means discerning silver linings where others see only clouds.

Flexibility is essential. Once, I believed that only the physicians treating patients should define and take charge of their care. Managed care has successfully challenged this philosophy by showing that patients (and doctors) are more similar than they are different. Also, I have learned that an obsessive concentration on the doctor–patient relationship distracts me from attending to the needs . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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