Fr. 52.50

What Patients Teach - The Everyday Ethics of Health Care

English · Paperback / Softback

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Zusatztext The essential opinions about patients expressed by the physicians in Healers are ineluctably subjective; they are not measurable and cannot be made objective. To comprehend that is to realize also how imperative thoughtful subjectivity is not only to clinical medicine and bioethics but also to how persons live their lives generally. Understand that, and you will begin to be free of scientism outside of its rightful domain. I believe you will come away from these books with an increased appreciation of healing and a wider and more human view of ethics. Informationen zum Autor Larry R. Churchill is the Anne Geddes Stahlman Professor of Medical Ethics, Professor of Medicine and Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Vanderbilt. His major works include a 1987 book Rationing Health Care in America (Univ. of Notre Dame Press), a 1994 book Self-Interest and Universal Health Care (Harvard Univ. Press, selected a Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Book for 1995). With Marion Danis and Carolyn Clancy he edited Ethical Dimensions of Health Policy, (Oxford University Press) in 2002.Joseph B. Fanning is Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He serves as the Director of the Clinical Ethics Consultations Service and works with patients, families and clinicians on ethical concerns that arise in patient care. His research focuses on the importance of communication in building therapeutic relationships. In 2009, Fanning co-edited with Ellen Wright Clayton a special issue of the American Journal of Medical Genetics that focused on spiritual and religious issues in medical genetics. He has also co-authored articles on the philosophy and practice of clinical ethics consultation. He is a lead investigator on a pilot project funded by the Baptist Healing Trust that seeks to understand how health care teams and families of incapacitated patients coordinate expectations about the future course of care.David Schenck is a Research Assistant Professor, Department of Medicine, of the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Society at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center. After twenty years as a professor of philosophy and religion, Schenck served as the founding executive director of a free medical clinic, and as a counselor and healthcare advocate for the homeless. He has volunteered and worked for many hospices over the last twenty years. Schenck has published articles in: Annals of Internal Medicine, Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, Social Medicine Reader, Society, Journal British Society Phenomenology, Phenomenology and Philosophical Research, Soundings, Journal of Religious Ethics, International Philosophical Quarterly, International Studies in Philosophy, Human Studies. He is the author, with Larry R. Churchill, of Healers: Extraordinary Clinicians at Work (Oxford University Press, 2011) Klappentext This book, a follow-up to Healers (OUP, 2012), answers two basic questions: As patients see it, what things allow relationships with healthcare providers to become therapeutic? What can this teach us about healthcare ethics? The authors present detailed descriptions and analyses of 55 interviews with 58 patients, representing a wide spectrum of illnesses and clinician specialties. What becomes visible is an ethics of everyday interdependence, with mutual responsibilities that follow from a moral symbiosis. Professional expressions of healthcare ethics and the field of bioethics need to be informed and reformed by this distinctive, more patient-centered, turn in how we understand both patient care as a whole and the ethics of care more specifically. The authors ultimately present a revised code of ethics for health professionals, as well as the implications for medical and health professions education. Zusammenfassung Being a patient is a unique interpersonal experience but it is also a universal human experience. The re...

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