Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

About the Authors xi

Preface and Acknowledgments xiii

1 Introduction to Ethics 1

1.1 Religion and Ethics 6

1.2 Law and Ethics 9

1.2.1 Legal and Moral Rights 12

1.3 Ethical Relativism 13

1.4 Why be Ethical? 15

2 Ethical Theory 21

2.1 Virtue Ethics 21

2.2 Feminist Ethics 23

2.3 Utilitarian Ethics 25

2.4 Rule‐Based Ethics 29

2.5 ‘Georgetown Mantra’ 30

2.5.1 Non‐Maleficence 31

2.5.2 Beneficence 31

2.5.3 Respect for Autonomy 31

2.5.4 Justice 32

2.6 Contract Theory 34

3 Basics of Bioethics 37

3.1 History and Scope of Bioethics 37

3.2 Who Can Claim to be a Bioethicist? 41

3.3 Organizations and Journals 43

3.4 Policy Advice 43

3.5 Common Arguments in Bioethics 45

3.6 Playing God 46

3.7 Unnatural and Abnormal 47

3.8 Dignity 48

3.9 Nazi Arguments in Bioethics 51

3.10 Slippery‐Slope Arguments 53

3.11 Treating Someone as a Means 55

4 Moral Standing: What Matters 59

4.1 Moral Standing and Moral Status 59

4.2 Species Membership 60

4.3 Sentientism 62

4.4 Capabilities 64

4.5 Biocentrism 64

4.6 Holism 65

4.7 The Future 66

5 Beginning of Life 69

5.1 Introduction 69

5.2 Ethical Arguments about Reproductive Rights and Responsibilities 70

5.2.1 Reproductive Autonomy and the Right to Reproduce 70

5.2.2 Consequentialism and Procreative Beneficence 71

5.2.3 ‘Do No Harm’ and the Person‐Affecting Restriction 72

5.2.4 The Non‐Identity Problem 72

5.2.5 Virtue Ethics 73

5.2.6 Feminist Bioethics 73

5.3 Issues in Assisted Reproduction 74

5.3.1 Genetic Relatedness: How Important Is It? 75

5.3.2 Issues of Selection in Reproduction 77

5.4 Embryos, Fetuses and Abortion 79

5.4.1 Fetuses 80

5.4.2 Judith Jarvis Thomson and the Violinist 81

5.4.3 The ‘Future‐Like‐Ours’ Argument 81

5.4.4 The Impairment Argument Against Abortion 82

5.4.5 Women’s Character 82

5.4.6 Abortion and Fetal Transplants 83

5.4.7 Savior Siblings 84

5.4.8 Infants and Infanticide 85

5.4.9 Severely Disabled Infants 86

5.4.10 Acts and Omissions 87

5.4.11 Newborn Screening 88

6 Health Care Professional-Patient Relationship 91

6.1 Informed Consent 92

6.2 Paternalism 96

6.3 Deciding for Others 97

6.3.1 Deciding for Others: Advance Directives 97

6.3.2 Deciding for Others: Patients Who Never Had Capacity 98

6.3.3 Deciding for Others: Incapacitated Patients without Advance Directives 99

6.4 Truth Telling 102

6.5 Confidentiality 105

6.6 Conscience Matters 107

6.7 Duty to Treat 110

7 Research Ethics 115

7.1 Elements of Ethical Research 117

7.2 Clinical Research: The Basics 118

7.3 Animal Experiments 120

7.4 Informed Consent 121

7.5 Trial‐Related Injuries 122

7.6 Benefits 124

7.7 Benefiting from Evil 125

7.8 Ethical Issues Affecting Clinical Research Involving the Catastrophically Ill 127

7.9 Developing World 130

7.9.1 Utility of Research Question 130

7.9.2 Standards of Care 131

8 Genetics 135

8.1 Genetics and Genomics 135

8.1.1 Introduction – Genetics, Genomics and Bioethics: Is Genetics Special? 135

8.1.2 Issues in Clinical Genetics: Genetic Testing and Counseling 137

8.1.2.1 Non‐Directiveness 137

8.1.2.2 Children 138

8.1.2.3 Genetic Screening 139

8.1.2.4 Direct‐to‐Consumer Testing 139

8.2 Gene Therapy: Somatic and Germline 140

8.2.1 Is There a Need for Germline Gene Therapy? 142

8.2.2 Risks and Irreversible Consequences 142

8.2.3 Future Generations and Lack of Consent 143

8.2.4 The Iconic Significance of the Germline 143

8.2.5 Gene Editing 144

8.3 Genomic Research 146

8.3.1 The Human Genome Project 146

8.3.2 Biobanks 147

8.3.3 Feedback of Findings 149

8.4 Personalized Medicine 150

8.4.1 Human Cloning – Therapeutic Cloning 151

8.4.2 Reproductive Cloning 153

8.5 Other Issues in Genetics and Genomics 155

9 Enhancement 159

9.1 Introduction 159

9.2 Enhancement and Superhumans 159

9.3 The Meaning of Enhancement 161

9.3.1 Enhancement and Improvement 161

9.4 Alternatives to the ‘Improvement’ Account 163

9.4.1 Therapy–Enhancement Distinction 163

9.4.2 Species‐Normal Functioning 164

9.4.2.1 Quantitative Account of Enhancement 164

9.4.3 Enhancement: The Umbrella View 165

9.5 Ethical Issues 166

9.5.1 Is Enhancement Necessary? 166

9.5.2 Enhancement is Inevitable 167

9.5.3 A Compromise Position? 168

9.5.4 Autonomy 169

9.5.5 The Habermasian Concern 169

9.6 Social Inequalities and Social Justice 170

9.6.1 Consequences for the Future of Humans 171

9.7 Moral Enhancement 173

9.8 Cognitive Enhancement 176

10 Mental Health 181

10.1 Mental Illness 182

10.2 Diagnosis 184

10.3 Autonomy and Capacity 186

10.4 Least Restrictive Option 187

10.5 Best Interests 188

10.6 Treatment and Detention 189

10.6.1 Detention for the Good of the Service User 189

10.6.2 Detention for the Protection of Others 191

11 End of Life 195

11.1 Do You Want to Live Forever? 195

11.2 Terminology 201

11.3 Case for the Decriminalization of Assisted Dying 203

11.4 The Case Against the Decriminalization of Assisted Dying 207

11.4.1 In‐Principle Reasons Against Assistance in Dying 207

11.4.2 Slippery‐Slope Reasons Against Assistance in Dying 208

11.4.2.1 Pereira v. Downie 210

11.5 Violation of Health Care Professional Values and Traditions 213

12 Justice and Health Care 217

12.1 Introduction 217

12.2 Types of Justice 218

12.2.1 Justice and Discrimination 218

12.2.2 Justice in Distribution 219

12.2.3 Procedural Justice 220

12.2.4 Justice and Exploitation 220

12.3 The Concept of Justice and its Connection With Equality 222

12.3.1 Justice and Equality: Equal Treatment and Equal Consideration 222

12.3.2 Justice, ‘Deserving’, and Personal Responsibility 223

12.3.3 Justice is Giving People What They Need 225

12.4 Theories of Justice 225

12.4.1 Utility and Well‐Being 225

12.4.2 Respect for Persons: Rights to Health and Health Care 228

12.4.3 John Rawls and Norman Daniels 229

12.4.4 The Capabilities Approach 231

12.5 Special Cases 232

12.5.1 Personalized Medicine and Justice 233

13 Population Health 235

13.1 Global Health Issues 235

13.2 Health Aid Obligations 236

13.2.1 Allocation Priorities 238

13.3 Population Health and Public Health 240

13.4 Communicable Disease Control Challenges 243

13.4.1 Take One: Michael Johnson is Not Culpable 245

13.4.2 Take Two: Michael Johnson is Culpable 245

13.4.3 Take Three: Shared Responsibility 246

13.4.4 Deterrence 246

13.4.5 Private Acts and Social Consequences 247

13.4.6 Novel Coronavirus Pandemic 248

13.4.7 Vaccines 251

13.5 Public Health Promotion 253

13.5.1 Communicable Disease: HIV 254

13.5.2 Non‐Communicable Disease: Obesity 256

Bibliography 261

Further Reading 287

Index 295

This Is Bioethics

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    A Paperback / softback by Ruth F. Chadwick, Udo Schüklenk

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      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 30/11/2020
      ISBN13: 9781118770740, 978-1118770740
      ISBN10: 1118770749

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Table of Contents

      About the Authors xi

      Preface and Acknowledgments xiii

      1 Introduction to Ethics 1

      1.1 Religion and Ethics 6

      1.2 Law and Ethics 9

      1.2.1 Legal and Moral Rights 12

      1.3 Ethical Relativism 13

      1.4 Why be Ethical? 15

      2 Ethical Theory 21

      2.1 Virtue Ethics 21

      2.2 Feminist Ethics 23

      2.3 Utilitarian Ethics 25

      2.4 Rule‐Based Ethics 29

      2.5 ‘Georgetown Mantra’ 30

      2.5.1 Non‐Maleficence 31

      2.5.2 Beneficence 31

      2.5.3 Respect for Autonomy 31

      2.5.4 Justice 32

      2.6 Contract Theory 34

      3 Basics of Bioethics 37

      3.1 History and Scope of Bioethics 37

      3.2 Who Can Claim to be a Bioethicist? 41

      3.3 Organizations and Journals 43

      3.4 Policy Advice 43

      3.5 Common Arguments in Bioethics 45

      3.6 Playing God 46

      3.7 Unnatural and Abnormal 47

      3.8 Dignity 48

      3.9 Nazi Arguments in Bioethics 51

      3.10 Slippery‐Slope Arguments 53

      3.11 Treating Someone as a Means 55

      4 Moral Standing: What Matters 59

      4.1 Moral Standing and Moral Status 59

      4.2 Species Membership 60

      4.3 Sentientism 62

      4.4 Capabilities 64

      4.5 Biocentrism 64

      4.6 Holism 65

      4.7 The Future 66

      5 Beginning of Life 69

      5.1 Introduction 69

      5.2 Ethical Arguments about Reproductive Rights and Responsibilities 70

      5.2.1 Reproductive Autonomy and the Right to Reproduce 70

      5.2.2 Consequentialism and Procreative Beneficence 71

      5.2.3 ‘Do No Harm’ and the Person‐Affecting Restriction 72

      5.2.4 The Non‐Identity Problem 72

      5.2.5 Virtue Ethics 73

      5.2.6 Feminist Bioethics 73

      5.3 Issues in Assisted Reproduction 74

      5.3.1 Genetic Relatedness: How Important Is It? 75

      5.3.2 Issues of Selection in Reproduction 77

      5.4 Embryos, Fetuses and Abortion 79

      5.4.1 Fetuses 80

      5.4.2 Judith Jarvis Thomson and the Violinist 81

      5.4.3 The ‘Future‐Like‐Ours’ Argument 81

      5.4.4 The Impairment Argument Against Abortion 82

      5.4.5 Women’s Character 82

      5.4.6 Abortion and Fetal Transplants 83

      5.4.7 Savior Siblings 84

      5.4.8 Infants and Infanticide 85

      5.4.9 Severely Disabled Infants 86

      5.4.10 Acts and Omissions 87

      5.4.11 Newborn Screening 88

      6 Health Care Professional-Patient Relationship 91

      6.1 Informed Consent 92

      6.2 Paternalism 96

      6.3 Deciding for Others 97

      6.3.1 Deciding for Others: Advance Directives 97

      6.3.2 Deciding for Others: Patients Who Never Had Capacity 98

      6.3.3 Deciding for Others: Incapacitated Patients without Advance Directives 99

      6.4 Truth Telling 102

      6.5 Confidentiality 105

      6.6 Conscience Matters 107

      6.7 Duty to Treat 110

      7 Research Ethics 115

      7.1 Elements of Ethical Research 117

      7.2 Clinical Research: The Basics 118

      7.3 Animal Experiments 120

      7.4 Informed Consent 121

      7.5 Trial‐Related Injuries 122

      7.6 Benefits 124

      7.7 Benefiting from Evil 125

      7.8 Ethical Issues Affecting Clinical Research Involving the Catastrophically Ill 127

      7.9 Developing World 130

      7.9.1 Utility of Research Question 130

      7.9.2 Standards of Care 131

      8 Genetics 135

      8.1 Genetics and Genomics 135

      8.1.1 Introduction – Genetics, Genomics and Bioethics: Is Genetics Special? 135

      8.1.2 Issues in Clinical Genetics: Genetic Testing and Counseling 137

      8.1.2.1 Non‐Directiveness 137

      8.1.2.2 Children 138

      8.1.2.3 Genetic Screening 139

      8.1.2.4 Direct‐to‐Consumer Testing 139

      8.2 Gene Therapy: Somatic and Germline 140

      8.2.1 Is There a Need for Germline Gene Therapy? 142

      8.2.2 Risks and Irreversible Consequences 142

      8.2.3 Future Generations and Lack of Consent 143

      8.2.4 The Iconic Significance of the Germline 143

      8.2.5 Gene Editing 144

      8.3 Genomic Research 146

      8.3.1 The Human Genome Project 146

      8.3.2 Biobanks 147

      8.3.3 Feedback of Findings 149

      8.4 Personalized Medicine 150

      8.4.1 Human Cloning – Therapeutic Cloning 151

      8.4.2 Reproductive Cloning 153

      8.5 Other Issues in Genetics and Genomics 155

      9 Enhancement 159

      9.1 Introduction 159

      9.2 Enhancement and Superhumans 159

      9.3 The Meaning of Enhancement 161

      9.3.1 Enhancement and Improvement 161

      9.4 Alternatives to the ‘Improvement’ Account 163

      9.4.1 Therapy–Enhancement Distinction 163

      9.4.2 Species‐Normal Functioning 164

      9.4.2.1 Quantitative Account of Enhancement 164

      9.4.3 Enhancement: The Umbrella View 165

      9.5 Ethical Issues 166

      9.5.1 Is Enhancement Necessary? 166

      9.5.2 Enhancement is Inevitable 167

      9.5.3 A Compromise Position? 168

      9.5.4 Autonomy 169

      9.5.5 The Habermasian Concern 169

      9.6 Social Inequalities and Social Justice 170

      9.6.1 Consequences for the Future of Humans 171

      9.7 Moral Enhancement 173

      9.8 Cognitive Enhancement 176

      10 Mental Health 181

      10.1 Mental Illness 182

      10.2 Diagnosis 184

      10.3 Autonomy and Capacity 186

      10.4 Least Restrictive Option 187

      10.5 Best Interests 188

      10.6 Treatment and Detention 189

      10.6.1 Detention for the Good of the Service User 189

      10.6.2 Detention for the Protection of Others 191

      11 End of Life 195

      11.1 Do You Want to Live Forever? 195

      11.2 Terminology 201

      11.3 Case for the Decriminalization of Assisted Dying 203

      11.4 The Case Against the Decriminalization of Assisted Dying 207

      11.4.1 In‐Principle Reasons Against Assistance in Dying 207

      11.4.2 Slippery‐Slope Reasons Against Assistance in Dying 208

      11.4.2.1 Pereira v. Downie 210

      11.5 Violation of Health Care Professional Values and Traditions 213

      12 Justice and Health Care 217

      12.1 Introduction 217

      12.2 Types of Justice 218

      12.2.1 Justice and Discrimination 218

      12.2.2 Justice in Distribution 219

      12.2.3 Procedural Justice 220

      12.2.4 Justice and Exploitation 220

      12.3 The Concept of Justice and its Connection With Equality 222

      12.3.1 Justice and Equality: Equal Treatment and Equal Consideration 222

      12.3.2 Justice, ‘Deserving’, and Personal Responsibility 223

      12.3.3 Justice is Giving People What They Need 225

      12.4 Theories of Justice 225

      12.4.1 Utility and Well‐Being 225

      12.4.2 Respect for Persons: Rights to Health and Health Care 228

      12.4.3 John Rawls and Norman Daniels 229

      12.4.4 The Capabilities Approach 231

      12.5 Special Cases 232

      12.5.1 Personalized Medicine and Justice 233

      13 Population Health 235

      13.1 Global Health Issues 235

      13.2 Health Aid Obligations 236

      13.2.1 Allocation Priorities 238

      13.3 Population Health and Public Health 240

      13.4 Communicable Disease Control Challenges 243

      13.4.1 Take One: Michael Johnson is Not Culpable 245

      13.4.2 Take Two: Michael Johnson is Culpable 245

      13.4.3 Take Three: Shared Responsibility 246

      13.4.4 Deterrence 246

      13.4.5 Private Acts and Social Consequences 247

      13.4.6 Novel Coronavirus Pandemic 248

      13.4.7 Vaccines 251

      13.5 Public Health Promotion 253

      13.5.1 Communicable Disease: HIV 254

      13.5.2 Non‐Communicable Disease: Obesity 256

      Bibliography 261

      Further Reading 287

      Index 295

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