Description

Book Synopsis
The last chapter is a new summary of practical solutions useful to family members and professionals.

Trade Review
With this second edition of The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease, Post has enlarged upon his original work in a way to make it even more useful and current. The updated version now gives a highly readable strategy for dealing with end-of-life issues, such as artificial tube feeding and dehydration. In his characteristically clear manner, Post equips us with the necessary facts and then cogently suggest how to proceed humanely and with absolute consideration of the person who should be at the center of concern. -- Peter M. Jucovey Perspectives in Biology and Medicine Post has provided a well-researched book with an outstanding bibliography that will be helpful to all caregivers as well as health care providers. The text provides information to guide readers before and during ethical and moral decision making and is very sensitive to the various emotions one endures when the diagnosis is AD. Health Progress In summary, then, Post proposes a new ethic in regard to terminal dementia care. The considerations proposed in this book offer a meaningful guide to both health care professionals and families in dealing with these special issues and advocate a natural death for these patients, freeing families from the sometimes enormous sense of guilt they encounter in making decisions about life extending interventions. Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease: Defining the Task
Chapter 2. The Family Caregiver: Partnership in Hope
Chapter 3. Fairhill Guidelines on Ethics and the Care of People with Alzheimer Disease
Chapter 4. Genetic Education for a Too-Hopeful Public
Chapter 5. The Humane Goal: Enhancing the Well-Being of Persons with Dementia
Chapter 6. Dying with Dignity: The Case Against Artificial Nutrition and Hydration
Chapter 7. An Argument Against Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in the Context of Progressive Dementia
Chapter 8. Toward a New Ethics of Dementia Care
References
Index

The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease Ethical

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    A Paperback / softback by Stephen G. Post

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      View other formats and editions of The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease Ethical by Stephen G. Post

      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 10/11/2000
      ISBN13: 9780801864100, 978-0801864100
      ISBN10: 0801864100

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The last chapter is a new summary of practical solutions useful to family members and professionals.

      Trade Review
      With this second edition of The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease, Post has enlarged upon his original work in a way to make it even more useful and current. The updated version now gives a highly readable strategy for dealing with end-of-life issues, such as artificial tube feeding and dehydration. In his characteristically clear manner, Post equips us with the necessary facts and then cogently suggest how to proceed humanely and with absolute consideration of the person who should be at the center of concern. -- Peter M. Jucovey Perspectives in Biology and Medicine Post has provided a well-researched book with an outstanding bibliography that will be helpful to all caregivers as well as health care providers. The text provides information to guide readers before and during ethical and moral decision making and is very sensitive to the various emotions one endures when the diagnosis is AD. Health Progress In summary, then, Post proposes a new ethic in regard to terminal dementia care. The considerations proposed in this book offer a meaningful guide to both health care professionals and families in dealing with these special issues and advocate a natural death for these patients, freeing families from the sometimes enormous sense of guilt they encounter in making decisions about life extending interventions. Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings

      Table of Contents

      Preface
      Acknowledgments
      Chapter 1. The Moral Challenge of Alzheimer Disease: Defining the Task
      Chapter 2. The Family Caregiver: Partnership in Hope
      Chapter 3. Fairhill Guidelines on Ethics and the Care of People with Alzheimer Disease
      Chapter 4. Genetic Education for a Too-Hopeful Public
      Chapter 5. The Humane Goal: Enhancing the Well-Being of Persons with Dementia
      Chapter 6. Dying with Dignity: The Case Against Artificial Nutrition and Hydration
      Chapter 7. An Argument Against Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in the Context of Progressive Dementia
      Chapter 8. Toward a New Ethics of Dementia Care
      References
      Index

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