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Are medical doctors and/or general surgeons obliged to offer a portion of there services to the needy annualy? This is called pro bono... and who compensates them?
They would be compensated, right?

2007-02-13 17:53:10 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Community Service

3 answers

It is a part of the hypocratic oath that doctors take, and is expected, is tax deductible (which is why most docs give away their services for free), but is not compensated per se. If you make $300,000 a year, your taxes run about $75,000. But if you give away $50,000 a year in free information and exams, the tax liability drops seriously. It is also why a Lawyer will do the same thing, giving away representation "pro bono".

2007-02-13 18:03:09 · answer #1 · answered by Simple Man Of God 5 · 1 0

professional Bono ability without pay, so no they does no longer be compensated. medical doctors are not obligated to try this, as some legal experts are in keeping with the place they're working. some medical doctors are shifting in that course yet no longer very many. those that artwork the place the human beings get loose provider does no longer mean that the medical doctors are working professional Bono. they're getting paid via supplies you which ones are designed to allow in simple terms that, loose provider for the needy. although that would not appear like lots of a distinction that's a great deal different from the wellbeing care expert's point of view.

2016-12-17 09:36:15 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

By definition, pro bono work is not compensated (unless someone wants to compensate their expenses or time or supplies or whatever).

I don't know whether medical doctors are obligated to work for pro bono. Pro bono is short for "pro bono publico" ... which means: for the public good.

2007-02-13 18:03:38 · answer #3 · answered by Meta Irie 2 · 0 0

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