Complex stairs and modern buildings symbolizing the maze of today’s healthcare system.

From calling to commodity: Has medicine lost its soul?

When I graduated from medical school, I believed I was answering a calling—one that transcended titles, salaries, or market forces. I envisioned a career defined by service, empathy, and the sacred bond between healer and patient. Yet over the years, I’ve watched that calling be reshaped into a commodity: healthcare packaged as a product, clinicians as line items on a balance sheet. As physicians, we are at a crossroads: reclaim our vocation’s soul or accept a transactional future in which the art of healing is auctioned to the highest bidder.

The rise of the healthcare marketplace

The transformation didn’t happen overnight. It crept in through corporate consolidations, pay‑for‑performance mandates, and a relentless emphasis on revenue generation. Today: 

  • Hospitals negotiate bulk discounts on implants as if games of procurement. 
  • Physician productivity is measured in relative value units (RVUs) rather than patient stories. 
  • Software algorithms optimize appointment flow, sometimes at the expense of meaningful conversation. 

In this marketplace paradigm, medicine is valued for its efficiency and profitability, not its capacity to ease suffering or restore dignity. The soul of our profession—those unquantifiable moments of trust, kindness, and moral witness—has been relegated to the margins. 

The human cost of commodification

When healing becomes a commodity, both patients and physicians pay the price. 

1. Patient experience erodes

Imagine sitting across from your physician, only to sense they’re glancing at the clock. Appointment times shrink to 10 or even 7 minutes. You leave with a prescription, but without the reassurance you sought. As care becomes transactional, patients feel unheard and undervalued. Trust fractures. 

2. Physician disillusionment

We entered medicine to bear witness to human resilience and fragility. But when our days are consumed by quota‑chasing and documentation sprints, we lose connection with the very reason we trained for so long. Many clinicians I know have confessed feeling like “cogs in a machine,” diminishing their sense of purpose and fueling quiet resignation. 

3. Moral injury intensifies

When hospitals mandate cost‑cutting measures or impose protocols that conflict with individualized care, physicians endure moral injury—an ethical wound inflicted when we cannot act in accordance with our deepest values. The commodified model amplifies these conflicts, leaving us morally torn between financial imperatives and patient welfare. 

Reclaiming medicine’s soul

The good news is that a countercurrent is growing within the profession. At Physicians Anonymous, we witness daily examples of clinicians who resist commodification by reconnecting with the wellsprings of their calling. Here are pathways we’re championing: 

1. Prioritize narrative medicine

Storytelling lies at the heart of healing. By deliberately incorporating narrative practices—such as inviting patients to share their life stories or keeping reflective journals—physicians can restore meaning to clinical encounters. Even a brief acknowledgment of a patient’s personal context can humanize the interaction and counteract commoditized routines. 

2. Embrace micro‑acts of compassion

Grand gestures are powerful, but small acts—a comforting word, a heartfelt apology for a wait, a handwritten note—can reaffirm the human connection. These micro‑acts signal to patients that they matter as individuals, not line items on a ledger. 

3. Advocate for shared governance

When physicians sit at the decision‑making table—shaping policies on scheduling, resource allocation, and quality metrics—the soul of medicine has a voice. Shared governance models foster alignment between administrative goals and clinical values, preventing purely profit‑driven mandates from eclipsing patient‑centered care. 

4. Cultivate community among clinicians

Commodification thrives in isolation. When physicians band together—through peer support groups, interdisciplinary case conferences, or informal “coffee huddles”—they rediscover collective purpose. Sharing stories of both triumphs and ethical struggles reinforces the communal spirit of medicine. 

5. Reimagine metrics of success

Beyond RVUs and throughput, organizations can measure success by patient‑reported experiences, clinician well‑being indices, and evidence of shared decision‑making. By redefining value, we shift incentives away from volume toward depth of care. 

A collective imperative

We cannot reverse commodification through isolated acts alone. The challenge demands coordinated effort: 

  • Educators must embed ethics and humanities in curricula, emphasizing medicine’s moral dimensions. 
  • Leaders must engage physicians as stewards of organizational values, not merely as producers of revenue. 
  • Policy‑makers must craft regulations that balance accountability with flexibility, allowing clinicians to exercise professional judgment. 
  • Patients and communities must advocate for care models that prioritize dignity and continuity. 

By aligning across roles, we can shift the healthcare landscape from marketplace transaction to sacred trust. 

Conclusion: medicine’s unseen flame

The soul of medicine flickers in countless quiet moments—the reassuring hand on a trembling shoulder, the tear shed at a patient’s bedside, the resolute decision to slow down and listen. These are not luxuries; they are the essence of healing. When commodification threatens to extinguish that flame, we must fan it back to life. 

As physicians, we hold both privilege and responsibility: to heal bodies and bear witness to lives. Let us reaffirm our calling not as a relic of a bygone era, but as a living, breathing force guiding 21st‑century care. In doing so, we safeguard medicine’s soul—for ourselves, our patients, and generations of healers to come. 

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn