"This volume...offers a rich array of perspectives from which to view the ethics of medicine. With twenty-three articles and a good deal of references for further reading, it will be a helpful tool for navigating the complex literature on the key issues in medical ethics." (<i>Ethical Perspectives</i>)

The Blackwell Guide to Medical Ethics is a guide to the complex literature written on the increasingly dense topic of ethics in relation to the new technologies of medicine.
  • Examines the key ethical issues and debates which have resulted from the rapid advances in biomedical technology
  • Brings together the leading scholars from a wide range of disciplines, including philosophy, medicine, theology and law, to discuss these issues
  • Tackles such topics as ending life, patient choice, selling body parts, resourcing and confidentiality
  • Organized with a coherent structure that differentiates between the decisions of individuals and those of social policy.
Les mer
The Blackwell Guide to Medical Ethics is a collection of new essays from acknowledged leaders in the field, designed to guide students through the complexities of the current state of ethics in medicine.
Les mer
Notes on Contributors.

Introduction: Rosamond Rhodes (Mount Sinai School of Medicine), Leslie P. Francis (University of Utah) and Anita Silvers (San Francisco State University).

Part I: Individual Decisions About Clinical Issues.

I.1: Patient Decisions.

1. Autonomy, the Good Life and Controversial Choices: Julian Savulescu (University of Oxford).

2. Individual Responsibility and Reproduction: Rachel A. Ankeny (University of Sydney).

3. Patient and Family Decisions about Life-Extension and Death: Felicia Nimue Ackerman (Brown University).

I.2: Individual Decisions of Physicians and Other Health Care Professionals.

4. The Professional Responsibilities of Medicine: Rosamond Rhodes (Mount Sinai School of Medicine).

5. Truth telling: Roger Higgs (Emeritus, King’s College, London).

6. Medical Confidentiality: Kenneth Kipnis (University of Hawaii at Manoa).

7. Patient Competence and Surrogate Decision-Making: Dan W. Brock (Harvard Medical School).

8. Ending Life: F.M. Kamm (Harvard University).

9. Discrimination in Medical Practice: Justice and the Obligations of Health Care Providers to Disadvantaged Patients: Leslie P. Francis (University of Utah).

10. Institutional Practices, Ethics, and the Physician: Mary V. Rorty (Stanford University), Ann E. Mills (University of Virginia), and Patricia H. Werhane (DePaul University).

Part II: Legislative and Judicial Decisions About Social Policy.

II.2: Liberty.

11. Reproductive Choice: Rebecca Bennett (University of Manchester) and John Harris (University of Manchester).

12. Public Policy and Ending Lives: Evert van Leeuwen (Vrije Universiteit Medisch Centrum), and Gerrit Kimsma (Vrije Universiteit Medisch Centrum).

13. Drug Legalization: Douglas N. Husak (Rutgers University).

14. Selling Organs, Gametes, and Surrogacy Services: Janet Radcliffe Richards (University College, London).

15. The Patient as Victim and Vector: The Challenge of Infectious Disease for Bioethics: Margaret P. Battin (University of Utah), Leslie P. Francis (University of Utah), Jay A. Jacobson (University of Utah), Charles B. Smith (Emeritus, University of Utah).

16. Uses of Science in Medical Ethics: Glenn McGee (Albany Medical College) and Dyrleif Bjarnadóttir.

11.2: Justice.

17. Allocation of Scarce Resources: Paul Menzel (Pacific Lutheran University).

18. Just Caring: The Challenges of Priority-Setting in Public Health: Leonard M. Fleck (Michigan State University).

19. Justice and the Financing of Health Care: Stephen R. Latham (Quinnipiac University).

20. Judgment and Justice: Evaluating Health Care for Chronically Ill and Disabled Patients: Anita Silvers (San Francisco State University).

21. Justice in Research on Human Subjects: David R. Buchanan (National Cancer Institute, Bethesda), and Franklin G. Miller (National Institutes of Health, Bethesda).

22. Ethics of Disclosure Following a Medical Injury: Time for Reform?: Troyen Anthony Brennan (Emeritus, Harvard Medical School).

23. Pre-existing Conditions: Genetic Testing, Causation and the Justice of Medical Insurance: Robert T. Pennock (Michigan State University).

Index

Les mer
The continuing advance of biomedical science heightens our concern about the welfare of patients and the ethical practice of health care professionals. Some of these worries turn on whether new technology-related issues are similar to traditional moral problems, or, instead, are of a different order or kind. Others are driven by commitments to liberty and justice that may call for new approaches to patients’ rights. Attempts to answer these questions have sparked heated controversies: even basic concepts are subject to dramatically opposing understandings.

The Blackwell Guide to Medical Ethics enters this arena as a helpful tool for navigating the complex literature and diverse views on the key issues in medical ethics. Employing crucial distinctions between the personal decisions of patients, the professional decisions of individual health care providers, and political decisions about public policy, the chapters in the volume address the most central and controversial topics in medical ethics. This book is an indispensable reference for anyone who wants to understand the field today and grapple with the challenges and controversies it presents.

Les mer
"There has been an enormous gap in the literature of bioethics – theory. In the rush to resolve contentious moral questions, inadequate attention has been paid to the tools used to achieve insight and answers. This important volume goes a long way toward providing what has been too little in evidence in the field. The Guide gives readers clear expositions of the normative rationales that leading thinkers in bioethics use to support their positions on a wide variety of timely issues. It is an invaluable toolkit for all interested in bioethics."
Arthur Caplan, University of Pennsylvania

"This excellent collection of specially written papers is organized in an innovative way that seeks to clear up a lot of confusion that comes from people talking past each other."
Bernard Gert, Dartmouth College

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781405125833
Publisert
2006-12-13
Utgiver
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Vekt
964 gr
Høyde
254 mm
Bredde
178 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
452

Biografisk notat

Rosamond Rhodes is Professor of Medical Education and Director of Bioethics Education at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, and Professor of Philosophy at The Graduate School, CUNY.

Leslie P. Francis is Professor of Philosophy and the Alfred C. Emery Professor of Law, Adjunct Professor of Political Science at the University of Utah, and Adjunct Professor in the Division of Medical Ethics, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine.

Anita Silvers is Professor of Philosophy at San Francisco State University.