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To the Editor: I am one of the septuagenarians described by Arnold in his cri de coeur over the demise of professional courtesies.1 In my medical student days, my teachers extended the courtesy of free medical treatment to my parents. I have continued this tradition, in the certain knowledge that this will be the only situation in which medical students save their parents money.
Such professional courtesies are still the norm in Western Australia. But, with the exception of medical colleagues, I have only once, in the 30 years of operation of Medibank/Medicare, had a bulk-billed patient realise that he has received a discount. I recently asked a picture framer/patient for a 40% discount and he laughed. When I explained that by bulk-billing I was effectively giving him a 40% discount, he was incredulous, but he did reciprocate.
In the 1970s, Australian Medical Association spokesmen and medical educators often confused etiquette (a code of desirable behaviour between doctors) with ethics (a more important set of moral principles underlying a person’s general behaviour). This is no longer the case, and etiquette has disappeared from undergraduate and postgraduate medical curricula. I think it is time to reintroduce the topic into the education of both our future doctors and our patients.
Discipline of General Practice, University of Western Australia, Perth, WA.
mkamienATcyllene.uwa.edu.au
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©The Medical Journal of Australia 2007 www.mja.com.au PRINT ISSN: 0025-729X ONLINE ISSN: 1326-5377