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Case studies in biomedical ethics :d...
~
Haddad, Amy Marie.
Case studies in biomedical ethics :decision-making, principles, and cases /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Case studies in biomedical ethics :/ Robert M. Veatch, Amy M. Haddad, Dan C. English.
其他題名:
decision-making, principles, and cases /
作者:
Veatch, Robert M.
其他作者:
Haddad, Amy Marie.
出版者:
New York :Oxford University Press, : c2015.,
版本:
2nd ed.
面頁冊數:
xx, 452 p. ;24 cm.;
標題:
Medical ethics -
ISBN:
0199946566 (pbk.)
Case studies in biomedical ethics :decision-making, principles, and cases /
Veatch, Robert M.
Case studies in biomedical ethics :
decision-making, principles, and cases /Robert M. Veatch, Amy M. Haddad, Dan C. English. - 2nd ed. - New York :Oxford University Press,c2015. - xx, 452 p. ;24 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index
Machine generated contents note: What Are the Source, Meaning, and Justification of Ethical Claims? -- Distinguish between Evaluative Statements and Statements Presenting Nonevaluative 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 -- Values: Positively Evaluated Consequences -- How Do Rules Apply to Specific Situations? -- What Ought to Be Done in Specific Cases? --Notes -- pt. 1 Ethics and Values in Medical Cases -- ch. 1A Model for Ethical Problem-Solving -- The Five -- Step Model -- Application of the Model -- Notes -- ch. 2 Valuesin Health and Illness -- Identifying Value Judgments in Medicine -- Separating Ethical and Other Evaluations -- Notes -- ch. 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 -- pt. 2 Ethical Principles in Medical Ethics -- ch. 4 Benefiting the Patient and Others:The Duty to Do Good and Avoid Harm -- Benefiting the Patient -- Health in Conflict with Other Goods -- RelatingBenefits 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 -- ch. 5 Justice: The Allocation of Health Resources -- Justice among Patients -- Justice between Patients and Others -- Justice in PublicPolicy -- Justice and Other Ethical Principles -- Notes --ch. 6 Autonomy -- Determining Whether a Patient Is Autonomous -- External Constraints on Autonomy -- Overriding the Choices of Autonomous Persons -- Notes -- ch. 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 Wantto Be Told -- Family Members Who Insist the Patient Not BeTold -- The Right of Access to Medical Records -- Notes --ch. 8 Fidelity: Promise-Keeping, Loyalty to Patients, and Impaired Professionals -- The Ethics of Promises: Explicitand Implicit -- Fidelity and Conflicts of Interest -- Incompetent and Dishonest Colleagues -- Notes -- ch. 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 -- pt. 3 Special Problem Areas -- ch. 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 -- ch. 11 Genetics,Birth, and the Biological Revolution -- Genetic Counseling-- Genetic Screening -- In Vitro Fertilization and Surrogate Motherhood -- Preimplantation Diagnosis -- Gene Therapy -- Notes -- ch. 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 -- ch. 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 -- ch. 14 Organ Transplants -- Procuring Organs -- Donation versus Salvaging -- The Grounds for Pronouncing Death -- Diseasedand 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 andHands: 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 -- ch. 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 -- ch. 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 -- ch. 17 Consent and the Right to Refuse Treatment -- The Elements of a Consent -- The Standards for Consent -- Comprehension and Voluntariness -- Notes -- ch. 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.
ISBN: 0199946566 (pbk.)
LCCN: 2014009585
Nat. Bib. No.: GBB4C5677bnb
Nat. Bib. Agency Control No.: 101655124DNLMSubjects--Topical Terms:
221883
Medical ethics
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
236062
Case Reports.
LC Class. No.: R724 / .V43 2015
National Library of Medicine Call No.: 2015 C-812
Case studies in biomedical ethics :decision-making, principles, and cases /
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Machine generated contents note: What Are the Source, Meaning, and Justification of Ethical Claims? -- Distinguish between Evaluative Statements and Statements Presenting Nonevaluative 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 -- Values: Positively Evaluated Consequences -- How Do Rules Apply to Specific Situations? -- What Ought to Be Done in Specific Cases? --Notes -- pt. 1 Ethics and Values in Medical Cases -- ch. 1A Model for Ethical Problem-Solving -- The Five -- Step Model -- Application of the Model -- Notes -- ch. 2 Valuesin Health and Illness -- Identifying Value Judgments in Medicine -- Separating Ethical and Other Evaluations -- Notes -- ch. 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 -- pt. 2 Ethical Principles in Medical Ethics -- ch. 4 Benefiting the Patient and Others:The Duty to Do Good and Avoid Harm -- Benefiting the Patient -- Health in Conflict with Other Goods -- RelatingBenefits 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 -- ch. 5 Justice: The Allocation of Health Resources -- Justice among Patients -- Justice between Patients and Others -- Justice in PublicPolicy -- Justice and Other Ethical Principles -- Notes --ch. 6 Autonomy -- Determining Whether a Patient Is Autonomous -- External Constraints on Autonomy -- Overriding the Choices of Autonomous Persons -- Notes -- ch. 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 Wantto Be Told -- Family Members Who Insist the Patient Not BeTold -- The Right of Access to Medical Records -- Notes --ch. 8 Fidelity: Promise-Keeping, Loyalty to Patients, and Impaired Professionals -- The Ethics of Promises: Explicitand Implicit -- Fidelity and Conflicts of Interest -- Incompetent and Dishonest Colleagues -- Notes -- ch. 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 -- pt. 3 Special Problem Areas -- ch. 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 -- ch. 11 Genetics,Birth, and the Biological Revolution -- Genetic Counseling-- Genetic Screening -- In Vitro Fertilization and Surrogate Motherhood -- Preimplantation Diagnosis -- Gene Therapy -- Notes -- ch. 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 -- ch. 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 -- ch. 14 Organ Transplants -- Procuring Organs -- Donation versus Salvaging -- The Grounds for Pronouncing Death -- Diseasedand 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 andHands: 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 -- ch. 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 -- ch. 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 -- ch. 17 Consent and the Right to Refuse Treatment -- The Elements of a Consent -- The Standards for Consent -- Comprehension and Voluntariness -- Notes -- ch. 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.
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到館:2016/06/06
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編目:2016/05/26
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後棟2F教師指定參考書區 2F Course Reserves Area (Rear Building)
前棟2F專業圖書區(圖書館) 2F Medical Monographic Collections (Front Building)
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