Clinical Ethics: An Invitation to Healing Professionals
By (Author) William dePender
By (author) Wanda Ikeda-Chandler
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
9th January 1990
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ethics and moral philosophy
174.2
Hardback
152
.Written for health care professionals who want to learn more about ethics but who have not had extensive training in philosophical theory, this unique volume explores what ethics has to offer the practicing physician, nurse, and allied health care worker. The authors introduce the basic vocabulary of ethics and present and discuss the most commonly used ethical theories, using case studies to illustrate how ethics work within the context of health care. Newcomers to the field will learn what ethics is all about and how it relates to the pragmatic concerns of the health care professional. Those who already have a working knowledge of the field will find a new approach to ethical theory--personalism--which the authors believe can make the practical use of ethics more effective and reliable. The authors begin by highlighting some modern issues--such as our growing reliance on technology and the increasing malpractice problem--which have renewed society's interest in ethics. They go on to develop a clear definition of ethics and examine how this discipline relates to the goals of health care. The middle chapters introduce the specialized vocabulary of ethics and discuss some common ethical issues. Two chapters outline various approaches to ethical theory, including one modeled closely after the traditions found in the healing arts. Finally, the authors explore the practical applications of ethics in the clinical setting, offering suggestions to the health care professional facing ethical dilemmas on the job. An appendix discusses the case studies that are found throughout the book.
.,."The authors are explicit in stating that they are aiming not for philosophical subletly but for a workable and apt approach for health practitioners. The discussion that they hope to further is not that among philosophers but among the people involved in decisions about patient care; patient, family, physician, medical and social supports of all sorts. The volume, with its brevity and clarity, can serve well as a catalyst for ethical discussion in the workplace."-Academic Library Book Review
...The authors are explicit in stating that they are aiming not for philosophical subletly but for a workable and apt approach for health practitioners. The discussion that they hope to further is not that among philosophers but among the people involved in decisions about patient care; patient, family, physician, medical and social supports of all sorts. The volume, with its brevity and clarity, can serve well as a catalyst for ethical discussion in the workplace.-Academic Library Book Review
..."The authors are explicit in stating that they are aiming not for philosophical subletly but for a workable and apt approach for health practitioners. The discussion that they hope to further is not that among philosophers but among the people involved in decisions about patient care; patient, family, physician, medical and social supports of all sorts. The volume, with its brevity and clarity, can serve well as a catalyst for ethical discussion in the workplace."-Academic Library Book Review
WILLIAM dePENDER, a practicing physician, teaches graduate ethics at Seattle University. He is a former visiting scholar of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics. WANDA IKEDA-CHANDLER has 10 years of direct patient care experience as an emergency room nurse in major urban trauma centers. She is currently nurse-manager of the Emergency Department and the Emergency Medical Services at the Oxford-Lafayette Medical Center in Oxford, Mississippi.