- Tue May 10, 2016 6:27 pm
#24387
Complete Question Explanation
Weaken—PR. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus explains that a certain criminal fugitive has a non-infectious skin problem that will need treatment, so police have published a wanted poster in a medical journal. The stimulus then concludes that it would be ethical for a physician who provides care to the fugitive to report him. The stimulus argues that gunshot wounds and infectious diseases must be reported, and those exceptions to confidentiality are ethical.
The stimulus is severely flawed. Presumably, gunshot wounds evidence a deadly potential, and infectious diseases pose a danger to society. The ethics involved in reporting such dangerous conditions to the police are in no way applicable to reporting someone as a consequence of a visit for a non-infectious disease.
Since you are asked to leave the standard exceptions intact, but support the idea that it would be a violation of ethics if a physician responded to the poster, you should focus on the erroneous comparison the stimulus makes between medical conditions that are either cause or consequence of dangers to society and a medical condition that has no inherent relationship to such a danger.
Answer choice (A):This choice would establish that a physician must always yield any information that a law official happens to want, which would strengthen rather than weaken the stimulus, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (B): Though this choice may have been attractive, because it effectively destroys the stimulus, it is incorrect. The question stipulates that you must choose the answer that is consistent with the current exceptions (gunshots and infectious diseases), but not the proposed exception. This response goes too far and does not allow the standard exceptions.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This principle does not allow physicians to report identities except in the case of gunshot wounds. That would prevent the physicians from reporting the fugitive while preserving the exception for gunshot wounds. This choice also allow the exception for infectious diseases, because a physician does not have to report a patient’s identity in order to report the occurrence of an infectious disease.
Answer choice (D): Since disallowing physicians from disclosing a patient’s medical condition would prevent physicians from reporting gunshot wounds and infectious diseases, this principle would not allow the required exceptions, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (E): If physicians cannot report the medical conditions of their patients to law enforcement, they cannot meet the required exceptions, so this choice is wrong.
Weaken—PR. The correct answer choice is (C)
The stimulus explains that a certain criminal fugitive has a non-infectious skin problem that will need treatment, so police have published a wanted poster in a medical journal. The stimulus then concludes that it would be ethical for a physician who provides care to the fugitive to report him. The stimulus argues that gunshot wounds and infectious diseases must be reported, and those exceptions to confidentiality are ethical.
The stimulus is severely flawed. Presumably, gunshot wounds evidence a deadly potential, and infectious diseases pose a danger to society. The ethics involved in reporting such dangerous conditions to the police are in no way applicable to reporting someone as a consequence of a visit for a non-infectious disease.
Since you are asked to leave the standard exceptions intact, but support the idea that it would be a violation of ethics if a physician responded to the poster, you should focus on the erroneous comparison the stimulus makes between medical conditions that are either cause or consequence of dangers to society and a medical condition that has no inherent relationship to such a danger.
Answer choice (A):This choice would establish that a physician must always yield any information that a law official happens to want, which would strengthen rather than weaken the stimulus, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (B): Though this choice may have been attractive, because it effectively destroys the stimulus, it is incorrect. The question stipulates that you must choose the answer that is consistent with the current exceptions (gunshots and infectious diseases), but not the proposed exception. This response goes too far and does not allow the standard exceptions.
Answer choice (C): This is the correct answer choice. This principle does not allow physicians to report identities except in the case of gunshot wounds. That would prevent the physicians from reporting the fugitive while preserving the exception for gunshot wounds. This choice also allow the exception for infectious diseases, because a physician does not have to report a patient’s identity in order to report the occurrence of an infectious disease.
Answer choice (D): Since disallowing physicians from disclosing a patient’s medical condition would prevent physicians from reporting gunshot wounds and infectious diseases, this principle would not allow the required exceptions, so this choice is wrong.
Answer choice (E): If physicians cannot report the medical conditions of their patients to law enforcement, they cannot meet the required exceptions, so this choice is wrong.