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HOSPITAL ABUSE.

JAMA. 1899;XXXIII(27):1657-1658. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.02450790021009.
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The question of abuse of hospital privileges is one that has agitated the medical profession for a long time, and it can not be settled on ordinary business lines. Of all pursuits, that of medicine is the only one that is ever willing and ready to give its services gratuitously when needed by those unable to pay. There is, therefore, all the greater reason why it should be protected from imposition. So general has the use of the privileges extended by hospitals become that what has been cordially granted the public as a charity and an act of philanthropy has come to be viewed by a portion of that same public as a right to be demanded. There is an impression among a portion of the community that the services of hospital physicians are paid for, and therefore that ability to pay professional fees need be no moral bar to

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