Medical EthicsOUP Australia & New Zealand, 30 հնս, 2005 թ. - 312 էջ This book is a practical introduction to the ethical questions doctors and other health professionals can be expected to encounter in their practice. It is of immediate relevance to health care professionals and to the users of health services. The authors start from the premise that medical ethics are embedded in the dilemmas of everyday practice, and their arguments return repeatedly to specific cases, following critical reflection on their views and the views of others. The book is intended as a basic textbook on medical ethics for any medical curriculum that has ethics as a serious component. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 1–ի 1-ից 1-ը:
Էջ 135
... physi- cians , by eliminating doubt as to the deceased's wishes ( Chouhan & Draper 2003 ) . Additional possibilities are based on a form of payment for cadaveric organ donation . Peters ( 1991 ) has proposed that a death benefit be paid ...
... physi- cians , by eliminating doubt as to the deceased's wishes ( Chouhan & Draper 2003 ) . Additional possibilities are based on a form of payment for cadaveric organ donation . Peters ( 1991 ) has proposed that a death benefit be paid ...
Բովանդակություն
The Healing Ethos | 20 |
Confidentiality | 26 |
Conclusion | 32 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
18 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում
Common terms and phrases
abortion acceptable Alzheimer's disease anencephalic animals argue argument assessment autonomy basis become benefit biological body brain death brain definition cadavers cells child clinical cloning concern confidentiality consider cultural dead decisions Declaration of Helsinki dementia diagnosis disability discussion disease disorders dissection doctor donation donor effect ensure euthanasia example fact fertilisation foetal foetus function gene therapy genetic genetic screening harm health care Hippocratic human embryos human tissue Huntington's disease illness individual informed consent intervention involved living Māori means medical ethics medical research medicine moral organ donation organs parents participants patient person personhood possible post-mortem potential practice practitioner principle problems procedures professional protect psychiatric realise reason recognise regard relationship respect responsibility result risk scientific sexual situation social society suffering suicide testing theory therapeutic therapist things tion transplantation treated treatment United Kingdom vulnerable xenotransplantation Zealand