The Journal of Clinical Ethics, Volume 11Journal of Clinical Ethics, Incorporated, 2000 - Medical ethics |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 65
Page 153
... Procedures undertaken with therapeutic warrant are subject to a risk - benefit assessment , and are justi- fied on the basis of clinical equipoise . To find that a given protocol satisfies this requirement , IRBs must determine that the ...
... Procedures undertaken with therapeutic warrant are subject to a risk - benefit assessment , and are justi- fied on the basis of clinical equipoise . To find that a given protocol satisfies this requirement , IRBs must determine that the ...
Page 179
... procedures gradually yielded to an accep- tance that the practice does have a role in training physicians . Committee members were especially per- suaded by the fact that certain resuscitation proce- dures are inherently limited because ...
... procedures gradually yielded to an accep- tance that the practice does have a role in training physicians . Committee members were especially per- suaded by the fact that certain resuscitation proce- dures are inherently limited because ...
Page 180
... procedures : Non - mutilating procedures may be taught and practiced on newly deceased patients , provided informed consent is first obtained from the de- ceased patient's parent or appropriate surrogate decision - maker . Informed ...
... procedures : Non - mutilating procedures may be taught and practiced on newly deceased patients , provided informed consent is first obtained from the de- ceased patient's parent or appropriate surrogate decision - maker . Informed ...
Contents
Features Some Final Thoughts from Tom Kitwood | 14 |
When Death | 21 |
The Effect of Clinical Medical Ethics Jeffrey Spike | 31 |
Copyright | |
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advance directives American Medical Association asked assessment assisted suicide autonomy behavior believe benefit Bioethics Brad's brain death Cancer caregivers careproviders Center child clini Clinical Ethics clinicians conflict costs court dead donor rule dementia dialysis discussion disease DNR order doctors drug elderly ethicist ethics committee ethics consultation euthanasia example family members feel futile hastening death Health healthcare hospital human iatrogenic informed consent institutional Internal Medicine involved issue Journal of Clinical Journal of Medicine life-sustaining treatment medi Medical Ethics medical students ment moral NHBD nursing home organ donation pain parents participation patients Pediatric pediatricians percent persons physi Physician-Assisted Suicide physicians practice procedures professionals prognosis protocol question reason refuse relationship reported request residents respondents resuscitation risk role SAN DIEGO sexual sion staff suffering surgery surrogate terminally ill therapy tients tion transplant UNIV University vignette wishes withhold