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ARTICLE |

THE DOCTOR'S BILLS.

JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(23):1431. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450750051013.
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ABSTRACT

We publish elsewhere in this issue an appreciative editorial from a leading popular monthly, noticing the fact that the physician's services too often do not receive their due compensation; that the public conscience needs a sharpening up as regards the payment of doctors' bills. It is pleasant to see the facts thus fairly stated in such a quarter, and. we trust it may do some good. There is, however, real truth in its suggestion that medical men are partly to blame by their remissness and unbusinesslike ways of collecting their fees. We are too much under the influence of the old tradition that our profession is apart from business, that business methods are out of place in an honorable profession. Just how or why it is more honorable or respectable to take an honorarium than to collect a bill is not clearly shown, though it may be admitted that asking

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