Fr. 188.00

Ethical Issues in Health Care on the Frontiers of the Twenty-First Century

English · Paperback / Softback

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of UB's medical school, that UB developed its School of Arts and Sciences, and thus, assumed its place among the other institutions of higher education. Had Fillmore lived throughout UB's first seventy years, he would probably have been elated by the success of his university, and he should have been satisfied and pleased that UB remained intrinsically bonded to its community while at the same time engrafting the values and standards important to higher education's mission in the region. UB and its medical school have undergone many challenging transitions since 1846. Included among them were: (1) the completion of an academic campus in the far northeast comer of the City of Buffalo while leaving its medical, dental and law schools firmly situated in the core of downtown Buffalo; (2) the eventual relocation, after the second world war, of the law school to the newer campus in Amherst, and the medical and dental school to the original academic campus: and (3) the merger with the State University of New York System in 1962. Despite these significant transitions, any one of which could have changed the intrinsic integrity of UB and disrupted the bonding between community and university, that did not happen. To this day, the ties between community and academe persist. Fillmore and White should celebrate their success and important contribution to Buffalo and Western New York.

List of contents

Keynote Address: Bioethics at the End of the Millennium: Fashioning Health-Care Policy in the Absence of a Moral Consensus.- Keynote Address: Bioethics at the End of the Millennium: Fashioning Health-Care Policy in the Absence of a Moral Consensus.- The Dilemma of Funding Health Care.- The Dilemma of Funding Health Care.- Toward Multiple Standards of Health Delivery: Taking Moral and Economic Diversity Seriously.- A Preventive Ethics Approach to the Managed Practice of Medicine: Putting the History of Medical Ethics to Work.- Saving Lives, Saving Money: Shepherding the Role of Technology.- The Human Genome Project.- The Human Genome, Difference, and Disease: Nature, Culture, and New Narratives for Medicine's Future.- Concepts of Disease After the Human Genome Project.- From Promises of Progress to Portents of Peril: Public Responses to Genetic Engineering.- PKU and Procreative Liberty: Historical and Ethical Considerations.- Everybody's Got Something.- The Physician/Patient Relationship.- The Physician/Paitient Relationship.- A Medicine of Neighbors.- Trust, Institutions, and the Physician-Patient Relationship: Implications for Continuity of Care.- Can Relationships Heal - At a Reasonable Cost?.- Values and the patient-physician relationship.

Summary

of UB’s medical school, that UB developed its School of Arts and Sciences, and thus, assumed its place among the other institutions of higher education. Had Fillmore lived throughout UB’s first seventy years, he would probably have been elated by the success of his university, and he should have been satisfied and pleased that UB remained intrinsically bonded to its community while at the same time engrafting the values and standards important to higher education’s mission in the region. UB and its medical school have undergone many challenging transitions since 1846. Included among them were: (1) the completion of an academic campus in the far northeast comer of the City of Buffalo while leaving its medical, dental and law schools firmly situated in the core of downtown Buffalo; (2) the eventual relocation, after the second world war, of the law school to the newer campus in Amherst, and the medical and dental school to the original academic campus: and (3) the merger with the State University of New York System in 1962. Despite these significant transitions, any one of which could have changed the intrinsic integrity of UB and disrupted the bonding between community and university, that did not happen. To this day, the ties between community and academe persist. Fillmore and White should celebrate their success and important contribution to Buffalo and Western New York.

Product details

Assisted by J. J. Bono (Editor), J.J. Bono (Editor), J Bono (Editor), J J Bono (Editor), G. Logue (Editor), G Logue et al (Editor), A. McEvoy (Editor), S. Wear (Editor), Stephen Wear (Editor)
Publisher Springer Netherlands
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 29.06.2009
 
EAN 9781402003677
ISBN 978-1-4020-0367-7
No. of pages 330
Dimensions 155 mm x 233 mm x 18 mm
Weight 522 g
Illustrations XVI, 330 p.
Series Philosophy and Medicine
Philosophy and Medicine, Volume 65
Philosophy and Medicine
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Philosophy > General, dictionaries
Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > Clinical medicine

B, Medicine, Ethics, Medicine: general issues, Philosophy, History of Medicine, Ethics & moral philosophy, Bioethics, Medical Ethics, Moral Philosophy and Applied Ethics, Medicine—History, Medicine—Philosophy, Philosophy of Medicine, Theory of Medicine/Bioethics

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