Fundamental Concepts Principles And Issues In Bioethics


Download Fundamental Concepts Principles And Issues In Bioethics PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Fundamental Concepts Principles And Issues In Bioethics book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Fundamental Concepts, Principles and Issues in Bioethics


Fundamental Concepts, Principles and Issues in Bioethics

Author: Jerry Reblora Manlangit

language: en

Publisher:

Release Date: 2010


DOWNLOAD





Principles of Biomedical Ethics


Principles of Biomedical Ethics

Author: Tom L. Beauchamp

language: en

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

Release Date: 1979


DOWNLOAD





This book offers a systematic analysis of the moral principles that should apply to biomedicine. We understand "biomedical ethics" as one type of applied ethics. In our discussions of ethical theory per se, we offer anaylses of levels of moral deliberation and justification and of the ways two major approaches interpret principles, rules, and judgments. The systematic core of the book presents four fundamental moral principles--autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice.

Rethinking Health Care Ethics


Rethinking Health Care Ethics

Author: Stephen Scher

language: en

Publisher: Springer

Release Date: 2018-08-02


DOWNLOAD





​The goal of this open access book is to develop an approach to clinical health care ethics that is more accessible to, and usable by, health professionals than the now-dominant approaches that focus, for example, on the application of ethical principles. The book elaborates the view that health professionals have the emotional and intellectual resources to discuss and address ethical issues in clinical health care without needing to rely on the expertise of bioethicists. The early chapters review the history of bioethics and explain how academics from outside health care came to dominate the field of health care ethics, both in professional schools and in clinical health care. The middle chapters elaborate a series of concepts, drawn from philosophy and the social sciences, that set the stage for developing a framework that builds upon the individual moral experience of health professionals, that explains the discontinuities between the demands of bioethics and the experience and perceptions of health professionals, and that enables the articulation of a full theory of clinical ethics with clinicians themselves as the foundation. Against that background, the first of three chapters on professional education presents a general framework for teaching clinical ethics; the second discusses how to integrate ethics into formal health care curricula; and the third addresses the opportunities for teaching available in clinical settings. The final chapter, "Empowering Clinicians", brings together the various dimensions of the argument and anticipates potential questions about the framework developed in earlier chapters.