Medical EthicsRobert M. Veatch Twelve contributors discuss critical issues affecting medical ethics. Topics include: the normative principles of medical ethics, concepts of health and disease, the physician-patient relationship, human experimentation, informed consent, genetics, ethical issues in organ transplantation, and moral |
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Page iv
... critical issues in major subareas of the field . For each chapter a leading scholar has developed a discussion of the critical concepts , arguments , and posi- tions of an aspect of medical ethics and its state - of - the - art . The ...
... critical issues in major subareas of the field . For each chapter a leading scholar has developed a discussion of the critical concepts , arguments , and posi- tions of an aspect of medical ethics and its state - of - the - art . The ...
Page 243
... critical of any effort to assess the qualifica- tions of individuals . Admitting that society does evaluate persons in many ways and for many purposes , they maintain that such evaluation is often inadequate and frequently biased . In ...
... critical of any effort to assess the qualifica- tions of individuals . Admitting that society does evaluate persons in many ways and for many purposes , they maintain that such evaluation is often inadequate and frequently biased . In ...
Page 334
... critically ill or dying patients . More- over , if the end of medicine is seen as the preservation of the patient's health and life by the treatment of disease , it is not then surprising that physicians are viewed as possessing the ...
... critically ill or dying patients . More- over , if the end of medicine is seen as the preservation of the patient's health and life by the treatment of disease , it is not then surprising that physicians are viewed as possessing the ...
Contents
THE HISTORY OF MEDICAL ETHICAL SYSTEMS | 7 |
THE ROLE OF CODES | 19 |
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS | 26 |
Copyright | |
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abortion allocation American anencephalic argued argument autonomy behavior benefit Bioethics Biomedical brain cells choice clinical codes competent concept confidentiality contraception Contractual models Court critical death decisionmaking decisions determine diagnosis disclosure drug duty effects embryos ethical issues example fetus function gene therapy harm Hastings Cent Rep health and disease health care health-care Hippocratic Hippocratic Oath human subjects important incompetent individual informed consent institution intervention involuntary commitment involving judgment justice justified life-sustaining treatment maximize medical ethics medicine mental illness moral principles National newborn screening newborns Nuremberg Code obligations one's organ transplantation patient person physician physician-patient relationship placebo possible practice pregnant President's Commission principles and rules procedures professional protect psychiatric question reason refuse reproductive right to health risk role screening social society standard sterilization surrogate theory tion tradition utilitarian utility Vitro Fertilization voluntary York