Description

Book Synopsis
.

Trade Review
I have found this to be an excellent textbook for my bioethics students. One of its major strengths is that it is so up to date. The authors obviously have a very strong grasp of current issues in health care today. * Robert Hurd, Xavier University *
Case Studies in Biomedical Ethics is extremely well written. * Robert V. Doyle, Loyola Marymount University *

Table of Contents
Table of Contents ; Case Studies in Biomedical Ethics: Decision-Making, Principles, and Cases ; Table of Contents ; List of Cases ; Preface to the Second Edition ; Preface to the First Edition ; Introduction: Four Questions of Ethics ; What Are the Source, Meaning, and Justification of Ethical Claims? ; Distinguish between Evaluative Statements and Statements Presenting Non-evaluative Facts ; Distinguish between Ethical and Nonethical Evaluations ; Determine Who Ought to Decide ; What Kinds of Acts Are Right? ; Consequentialism ; Deontological or <"Duty-Based>" Ethics ; Other Issues of Normative Ethics ; Virtues: Praiseworthy Traits of Character 42 Values: Positively Evaluated Consequences ; How Do Rules Apply to Specific Situations? ; What Ought to Be Done in Specific Cases? ; Notes ; PART 1: ETHICS AND VALUES IN MEDICAL CASES ; Chapter 1 A Model for Ethical Problem Solving ; The Five-Step Model ; Application of the Model ; Notes ; Chapter 2 : Values in Health and Illness ; Identifying Value Judgments in Medicine ; Separating Ethical and Other Evaluations ; Notes ; Chapter 3 : What Is the Source of Moral Judgments? ; Grounding Ethics in the Professional Code ; Grounding Ethics in the Physician's Orders ; Grounding Ethics in Institutional Policy ; Grounding Ethics in the Patient's Values ; Grounding Ethics in Religious or Philosophical Perspectives ; Notes ; PART 2: ETHICAL PRINCIPLES IN MEDICAL ETHICS ; Chapter 4 : Benefiting the Patient and Others: The Duty to Do Good and Avoid Harm ; Benefiting the Patient ; Health in Conflict with Other Goods ; Relating Benefits and Harms ; Benefits of Rules and Benefits in Specific Cases ; Benefiting Society and Individuals Who Are Not Patients ; Benefits to Society ; Benefits to Specific Nonpatients ; Benefit to the Profession ; Benefit to the Health Professional and the Health Professional's Family ; Notes ; Chapter 5 : Justice: The Allocation of Health Resources ; Justice among Patients ; Justice between Patients and Others ; Justice in Public Policy ; Justice and Other Ethical Principles ; Notes ; Chapter 6 : Autonomy ; Determining Whether a Patient Is Autonomous ; External Constraints on Autonomy ; Overriding the Choices of Autonomous Persons ; Notes ; Chapter 7 : Veracity: Honesty With Patients ; The Condition of Doubt ; Lying in order to Benefit ; Protecting the Patient by Lying ; Protecting the Welfare of Others ; Special Cases of Truth-Telling ; Patients Who Do Not Want to Be Told ; Family Members Who Insist the Patient Not Be Told ; The Right of Access to Medical Records ; Notes ; Chapter 8 : Fidelity: Promise-Keeping, Loyalty To Patients, And Impaired ProfessionalsOther Cases Involving Fidelity ; The Ethics of Promises: Explicit and Implicit ; Fidelity and Conflicts of Interest ; Incompetent and Dishonest Colleagues ; Notes ; Chapter 9 : Avoidance of Killing ; Active Killing versus Letting Die ; Withholding versus Withdrawing Treatment ; Direct versus Indirect Killing ; Justifiable Omissions: The Problem of Nutrition and Hydration ; Voluntary and Involuntary Killing ; Killing as Punishment ; Notes ; PART 3: Special Problem Areas ; Chapter 10 : Abortion, Sterilization, and Contraception ; Abortion ; Abortion for Medical Problems of the Fetus ; Abortion Following Sexual Assault ; Abortion to Save the Life of the Pregnant Woman ; Abortion and the Mentally Incapacitated Woman ; Abortion for Socioeconomic Reasons ; Sterilization ; Contraception ; Notes ; Chapter 11 : Genetics, Birth, and the Biological Revolution ; Genetic Counseling ; Genetic Screening ; In Vitro Fertilization and Surrogate Motherhood ; Preimplantation Diagnosis ; Gene Therapy ; Notes ; Chapter 12 : Mental Health and Behavior Control ; The Concept of Mental Health ; Mental Illness and Autonomous Behavior ; Mental Illness and Third-Party Interests ; Other Behavior-Controlling Therapies ; Notes ; Chapter 13 : Confidentiality: Ethical Disclosure of Medical Information ; Breaking Confidence to Benefit the Patient ; Breaking Confidence to Benefit Others ; Breaking Confidence as Required by Law ; Notes ; Chapter 14 : Organ Transplants ; Procuring Organs ; Donation versus Salvaging ; The Grounds for Pronouncing Death ; Diseased and Poor-Quality Organs ; Preserving the Organs of the Dying ; Socially Directed Organ Donation ; Living Donor/Deceased Donor Organ Swaps ; Children and Incompetent Persons as Living Organ Sources ; Transplanting Faces and Hands: Vascular Composite Allografts ; Allocating Organs ; Maximizing Benefits and Distributing Organs Fairly ; When Voluntary Risks Cause a Need for Organs ; Age and the Allocation of Organs ; Multiple Organs and Special Priority for Special People ; Notes ; Chapter 15 : Health Insurance, Health System Planning, and Rationing ; The Problem of Small, Incremental Benefits ; Limits on Unproved Therapies ; Marginally Beneficial, Expensive Therapy ; Funding Care that Patients Have Refused ; Pharmaceutical Manufacturers versus Insurers ; Insurance and the Uninsured ; The Affordable Care Act ; Notes ; Chapter 16 : Experimentation on Human Subjects ; Calculating Risks and Benefits ; Privacy and Confidentiality ; Equity in Research ; Conflicts of Interest in Research ; Informed Consent in Research ; Notes ; Chapter 17 : Consent and the Right to Refuse Treatment ; The Elements of a Consent ; The Standards for Consent ; Comprehension and Voluntariness ; Notes ; Chapter 18 : Death and Dying ; The Definition of Death ; Competent and Formerly Competent Patients ; Never Competent Patients ; Never Competent Persons without Available Family ; Never Competent Persons with Available Family ; Futile Care and Limits Based on the Interests of Others ; Notes ; Appendix: Codes of Ethics ; Glossary ; List of Cases from Public Sources

Case Studies in Biomedical Ethics

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A Paperback / softback by Robert M. Veatch, Amy M. Haddad, Dan C. English


    View other formats and editions of Case Studies in Biomedical Ethics by Robert M. Veatch

    Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
    Publication Date: 11/12/2014
    ISBN13: 9780199946563, 978-0199946563
    ISBN10: 0199946566

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    .

    Trade Review
    I have found this to be an excellent textbook for my bioethics students. One of its major strengths is that it is so up to date. The authors obviously have a very strong grasp of current issues in health care today. * Robert Hurd, Xavier University *
    Case Studies in Biomedical Ethics is extremely well written. * Robert V. Doyle, Loyola Marymount University *

    Table of Contents
    Table of Contents ; Case Studies in Biomedical Ethics: Decision-Making, Principles, and Cases ; Table of Contents ; List of Cases ; Preface to the Second Edition ; Preface to the First Edition ; Introduction: Four Questions of Ethics ; What Are the Source, Meaning, and Justification of Ethical Claims? ; Distinguish between Evaluative Statements and Statements Presenting Non-evaluative Facts ; Distinguish between Ethical and Nonethical Evaluations ; Determine Who Ought to Decide ; What Kinds of Acts Are Right? ; Consequentialism ; Deontological or <"Duty-Based>" Ethics ; Other Issues of Normative Ethics ; Virtues: Praiseworthy Traits of Character 42 Values: Positively Evaluated Consequences ; How Do Rules Apply to Specific Situations? ; What Ought to Be Done in Specific Cases? ; Notes ; PART 1: ETHICS AND VALUES IN MEDICAL CASES ; Chapter 1 A Model for Ethical Problem Solving ; The Five-Step Model ; Application of the Model ; Notes ; Chapter 2 : Values in Health and Illness ; Identifying Value Judgments in Medicine ; Separating Ethical and Other Evaluations ; Notes ; Chapter 3 : What Is the Source of Moral Judgments? ; Grounding Ethics in the Professional Code ; Grounding Ethics in the Physician's Orders ; Grounding Ethics in Institutional Policy ; Grounding Ethics in the Patient's Values ; Grounding Ethics in Religious or Philosophical Perspectives ; Notes ; PART 2: ETHICAL PRINCIPLES IN MEDICAL ETHICS ; Chapter 4 : Benefiting the Patient and Others: The Duty to Do Good and Avoid Harm ; Benefiting the Patient ; Health in Conflict with Other Goods ; Relating Benefits and Harms ; Benefits of Rules and Benefits in Specific Cases ; Benefiting Society and Individuals Who Are Not Patients ; Benefits to Society ; Benefits to Specific Nonpatients ; Benefit to the Profession ; Benefit to the Health Professional and the Health Professional's Family ; Notes ; Chapter 5 : Justice: The Allocation of Health Resources ; Justice among Patients ; Justice between Patients and Others ; Justice in Public Policy ; Justice and Other Ethical Principles ; Notes ; Chapter 6 : Autonomy ; Determining Whether a Patient Is Autonomous ; External Constraints on Autonomy ; Overriding the Choices of Autonomous Persons ; Notes ; Chapter 7 : Veracity: Honesty With Patients ; The Condition of Doubt ; Lying in order to Benefit ; Protecting the Patient by Lying ; Protecting the Welfare of Others ; Special Cases of Truth-Telling ; Patients Who Do Not Want to Be Told ; Family Members Who Insist the Patient Not Be Told ; The Right of Access to Medical Records ; Notes ; Chapter 8 : Fidelity: Promise-Keeping, Loyalty To Patients, And Impaired ProfessionalsOther Cases Involving Fidelity ; The Ethics of Promises: Explicit and Implicit ; Fidelity and Conflicts of Interest ; Incompetent and Dishonest Colleagues ; Notes ; Chapter 9 : Avoidance of Killing ; Active Killing versus Letting Die ; Withholding versus Withdrawing Treatment ; Direct versus Indirect Killing ; Justifiable Omissions: The Problem of Nutrition and Hydration ; Voluntary and Involuntary Killing ; Killing as Punishment ; Notes ; PART 3: Special Problem Areas ; Chapter 10 : Abortion, Sterilization, and Contraception ; Abortion ; Abortion for Medical Problems of the Fetus ; Abortion Following Sexual Assault ; Abortion to Save the Life of the Pregnant Woman ; Abortion and the Mentally Incapacitated Woman ; Abortion for Socioeconomic Reasons ; Sterilization ; Contraception ; Notes ; Chapter 11 : Genetics, Birth, and the Biological Revolution ; Genetic Counseling ; Genetic Screening ; In Vitro Fertilization and Surrogate Motherhood ; Preimplantation Diagnosis ; Gene Therapy ; Notes ; Chapter 12 : Mental Health and Behavior Control ; The Concept of Mental Health ; Mental Illness and Autonomous Behavior ; Mental Illness and Third-Party Interests ; Other Behavior-Controlling Therapies ; Notes ; Chapter 13 : Confidentiality: Ethical Disclosure of Medical Information ; Breaking Confidence to Benefit the Patient ; Breaking Confidence to Benefit Others ; Breaking Confidence as Required by Law ; Notes ; Chapter 14 : Organ Transplants ; Procuring Organs ; Donation versus Salvaging ; The Grounds for Pronouncing Death ; Diseased and Poor-Quality Organs ; Preserving the Organs of the Dying ; Socially Directed Organ Donation ; Living Donor/Deceased Donor Organ Swaps ; Children and Incompetent Persons as Living Organ Sources ; Transplanting Faces and Hands: Vascular Composite Allografts ; Allocating Organs ; Maximizing Benefits and Distributing Organs Fairly ; When Voluntary Risks Cause a Need for Organs ; Age and the Allocation of Organs ; Multiple Organs and Special Priority for Special People ; Notes ; Chapter 15 : Health Insurance, Health System Planning, and Rationing ; The Problem of Small, Incremental Benefits ; Limits on Unproved Therapies ; Marginally Beneficial, Expensive Therapy ; Funding Care that Patients Have Refused ; Pharmaceutical Manufacturers versus Insurers ; Insurance and the Uninsured ; The Affordable Care Act ; Notes ; Chapter 16 : Experimentation on Human Subjects ; Calculating Risks and Benefits ; Privacy and Confidentiality ; Equity in Research ; Conflicts of Interest in Research ; Informed Consent in Research ; Notes ; Chapter 17 : Consent and the Right to Refuse Treatment ; The Elements of a Consent ; The Standards for Consent ; Comprehension and Voluntariness ; Notes ; Chapter 18 : Death and Dying ; The Definition of Death ; Competent and Formerly Competent Patients ; Never Competent Patients ; Never Competent Persons without Available Family ; Never Competent Persons with Available Family ; Futile Care and Limits Based on the Interests of Others ; Notes ; Appendix: Codes of Ethics ; Glossary ; List of Cases from Public Sources

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