For nearly two decades medical ethics has matured in the fields of philosophy, religion and theology, and psychology. But now, at last, in Easier Said Than Done, a practicing physician describes the principles of an ethic that can justify sound medical decisions. Milton D. Heifetz, M.D., noted neurosurgeon and author of the controversial book The Right To Die, has made the tough decisions in tragic, often anguishing situations. As a member of hospital ethics committees for many years, Dr. Heifetz found that discussions of complex issues - many involving urgent matters of life and death - were all too often clouded by tradition, dogma, and gut reactions. A comprehensive moral foundation with the flexibility to respond to often rapidly changing circumstances is desperately needed if health-care professionals are to confront head-on the daily questions of medical ethics. Dr. Heifetz offers it here in a book that he hopes will help all who must make difficult medical choices: physicians and nurses as well as patients and their families. His insights will also prove invaluable to policy makers who are struggling to develop substantive rules for medical conduct.
Osler's original note reads : “ Professor Wheeler in Proceedings of Amer . Phil . Soc . , vol . Ivii , No. 4 , 1918. " William Morton Wheeler ( 1865-1937 ) : American entomologist . 93. the honey - dew and the milk of paradise : The ...
Brennan , Ensuring Adequate Health Care for the Sick : The Challenge of the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome as an Occupational Disease , 1988 Duke L. J. 29 ( 1988 ) ( VI ) . Brennan , Transmission of the Human Immunodeficiency Virus ...
MICHAEL S. GAZZANIGA David T. McLaughlin Distinguished Professor and Professor of Psychology , Dartmouth College , and Director , Center for Cognitive Neuroscience , Dartmouth College , Hanover , New Hampshire 03755 , USA JEFFREY J.
Law and Ethics for Health Occupations
Access Denied: A Report on Animal Experiments in Two British Laboratories, Charing Cross & Westminster Medical School, London, W6 and...
Key additions to the revised text include a glossary; updated facts, figures, tables, and statistics; new case studies; chapter discussion questions, including social-ethics questions; and social analysis.
Carey, Benedict. “Inside the Injured Brain, Many Kinds of Awareness.” New York Times (April 5, 2005). Available online. URL: www. nytimes.com/2005/04/05/health/05coma.html. Accessed January 2, 2008. Carey, Benedict and John Schwartz.
The definitive guide to the legal and ethical issues around medical and surgical practice. It is written with the busy clinician in mind who requires the key information presented without technical jargon in a handy quick-reference style.
This is an analysis of medical ethical concepts based on legal principles and court decisions, describing what actually happens in practice rather than what should happen and, where there are no precedents available, what is most likely to ...
Medical Ethics, Etiquette and Law