Assume that the clinic is located in a small town if it


Question: This week we will continue our discussion on ethics and decision making. The question highlights that sometimes personal feelings may be involved in making decisions. Several of you may have differing opinions and that is the point of this exercise, there is no easy answer and people come at it from different directions. I look forward to reading your posts.

A dialysis clinic provides two types of treatment for its patients. Hemodialysis (HD), an in-house treatment, requires patients to visit the clinic three times each week. Peritonaldialysis (PD) permits patients to self-administer their treatments at home on a daily basis. The clinic serves a number of HMO patients under a contract that limits collections from the HMO insurer to a fixed amount per patient. As a result, the clinics' profitability is directly related to its ability to control costs. For example, assume that the clinic is paid a fixed annual fee of $15,000 per HMO patient served. Also assume that the current cost to provide health care averages $14,000 a year per patient, resulting in an average profitability of $1,000 per patient ($15K - $14K). Because the revenue base is fixed, the only way the clinic can increase profitability is to lower its cost of providing services. If the clinic fails to control costs and the average cost of patient care increases, profitability will decline. A recent ABC study suggests that the cost to provide HD service exceeds the amount of revenue generated from providing that service. The clinic is profitable because PD services generate enough profit to more than make up for losses on HD services.

Using this information, answer Two of the following questions:

1. Assume that the clinic is located in a small town. If it discontinues treating the HD patients, they will be forced to drive 50 miles to the nearest alternative treatment center. Does the clinic have a moral obligation to society to continue to provide HD service although it is not profitable to do so?

2. The accountant's recommendation places profitability above the needs of HD patients. Do you think this recommendation violates any of the standards of ethical conduct?

3. Suppose that the clinic administrators respond to the ABC data by cutting costs. The clinic overbooks HMO patients to ensure that downtime is avoided when cancellations occur. It reduces the RN nursing staff and assigns some of the technical work to less qualified assistants. Ultimately, an overworked, under qualified nurse's aid makes a mistake and a patient dies. Who is at fault--the HMO, the accountant who conducted the ABC analysis, or the clinic administrators who responded to the ABC information?

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Accounting Basics: Assume that the clinic is located in a small town if it
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