Medical EthicsRobert M. Veatch This is a thoroughly revised new edition of a 1989 book, edited by one of the premier medical ethicists in the field. The original conception was that medical ethics had grown so significantly that a textbook should be produced modeled on those in medicine itself, with chapters contributed by leading authorities who would summarize issues and developments in their subspecialty. Major changes in the past five years in medical ethics, including rethinking the role of principles and new ethical issues, necessitated the revised edition. The audience is primarily students of medical ethics, either health professionals or preprofessionals, although established professionals and ethicists will also find the book helpful. Each chapter begins with a summary of issues to be explored and concludes with questions and references for further study. This version retains the original contributors and adds two new ones for chapters on AIDS and on healthcare reform. The earlier chapters are devoted to professional codes of ethics, ethical theories, concepts of health and disease, and the doctor-patient relationship, and the later ones to specific ethical issues of reproduction, human experimentation, consent, genetics, organ transplantation, psychiatric issues, allocation of health care, death and dying, AIDS, and healthcare reform. Chapter authors are the leading authorities in these topics. In this excellent update of an important text, the topics reflect the public policy orientation of the editor. Missing are many clinical ethics issues. |
From inside the book
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Page 218
... surrogate motherhood arrangement , the child results from the union of the surrogate mother's egg and the social father's sperm . In 1985 the first instance of surrogate moth- erhood assisted by in vitro fertilization occurred . In this ...
... surrogate motherhood arrangement , the child results from the union of the surrogate mother's egg and the social father's sperm . In 1985 the first instance of surrogate moth- erhood assisted by in vitro fertilization occurred . In this ...
Page 219
... surrogate motherhood arrange- ments be legally prohibited ? The answer to this question has varied from country to country . The United Kingdom and the state of Victoria in Austra- lia have legally banned commercial surrogate motherhood ...
... surrogate motherhood arrange- ments be legally prohibited ? The answer to this question has varied from country to country . The United Kingdom and the state of Victoria in Austra- lia have legally banned commercial surrogate motherhood ...
Page 372
... surrogate than anyone else who might generally be consulted . When the reasons supporting the family member as surrogate do not hold in a particular case , for example , because there is evi- dence the patient would have wanted a ...
... surrogate than anyone else who might generally be consulted . When the reasons supporting the family member as surrogate do not hold in a particular case , for example , because there is evi- dence the patient would have wanted a ...
Contents
An Introduction | 1 |
Codifications | 22 |
The Normative Principles of Medical Ethics | 29 |
Copyright | |
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