Priorities in Biomedical EthicsCase studies raise questions about patients' rights, advanced lifeprolonging measures, human subjects in medical research, and the allocation of health care resources. |
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Contents
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | 9 |
Paternalism and the Patients Right to Decide | 17 |
When Is Paternalism Justified? | 26 |
Copyright | |
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accept actions allocation argue argument artificial heart auton autonomy benefits and harms Biomedical Ethics chapter Charles Fried Childress choices clinical trial compensation compensatory justice conflict consequentialist criteria death decisions defective newborns determine dialysis discussion disease distinction duty England Journal equal access euthanasia example goal-rational Hans Jonas Hastings Center Report health care health care professionals hospital important individuals informed consent Injured Research Subjects injuries institutions issues John Stuart Mill Journal of Medicine judgments justified paternalism Laurence Tribe lives Max Weber means ment moral principles National needs nontherapeutic Nuremberg Code paternalistic patient-subject patient's best interest Paul Ramsey perspective physician prevent principles and values Principles of Biomedical priority prisoners probably procedures public policy question refusal requires rescue research involving human responsibility risk-benefit analysis role Ronald Dworkin Science social worth society society's standard technology assessment theological therapeutic research tion transfusions treat treatment urography utilitarian selection value-rational Veatch voluntary