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Postmodern malpractice [electronic resource] : a medical case study in the culture war / by Colleen D. Clements.

By: Clements, Colleen DMaterial type: TextTextSeries: Advances in bioethics ; v. 6Publication details: Oxford ; New York : JAI, 2001Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (xv, 275 p.)ISBN: 9781849500913 (electronic bk.) :; 1849500916 (electronic bk.) :Subject(s): Medical ethics -- Case studies | Medical ethics -- Social aspects -- Case studies | Bioethics -- Case studies | Social ethics -- Case studies | Bio-ethics | Medical -- EthicsAdditional physical formats: Print version:: Postmodern malpractice.DDC classification: 174/.2 LOC classification: R725.5 | .C54 2001Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Introduction: the Trojan horse of bioethics -- What really assassinated Hippocrates -- Bioethics in historical and philosophical context -- The postmodern environment of bioethics -- Human reproductive medicine: freedom or regulation -- Infectious diseases: ethics, experts and policy in AIDS, vCJD, Ebola virus, West Nile virus -- Abortion: human worth, the end of ethics and political entitlement -- Politicizing brain death, treatment refusal, physician-assisted suicide, terminal sedation, treatment rationing -- Health belief model and health delivery systems -- Alternative medicine, new age, classic shaman systems -- Behavioral myth, psychiatric abuse, and social manipulation -- Are patients better off than they were before the sixties: a second opinion and analysis of bioethics -- Resisting the total society, and a new model for ethics.
Summary: In this work, Colleen Clements presents her case for the need to subject the field of bioethics to a critical external analysis apart from the current postmodern assumptions. Clements argues that, since the 1970s, bioethics has refuted human values in favour of political consensus building. This failure to recognize basic human values in the ethical critique of modern medicine has lead to a dehumanization of the medical system by the field. Clements proceeds to advocate a naturalistic theory of bioethics that reinstates primary human values.
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Introduction: the Trojan horse of bioethics -- What really assassinated Hippocrates -- Bioethics in historical and philosophical context -- The postmodern environment of bioethics -- Human reproductive medicine: freedom or regulation -- Infectious diseases: ethics, experts and policy in AIDS, vCJD, Ebola virus, West Nile virus -- Abortion: human worth, the end of ethics and political entitlement -- Politicizing brain death, treatment refusal, physician-assisted suicide, terminal sedation, treatment rationing -- Health belief model and health delivery systems -- Alternative medicine, new age, classic shaman systems -- Behavioral myth, psychiatric abuse, and social manipulation -- Are patients better off than they were before the sixties: a second opinion and analysis of bioethics -- Resisting the total society, and a new model for ethics.

In this work, Colleen Clements presents her case for the need to subject the field of bioethics to a critical external analysis apart from the current postmodern assumptions. Clements argues that, since the 1970s, bioethics has refuted human values in favour of political consensus building. This failure to recognize basic human values in the ethical critique of modern medicine has lead to a dehumanization of the medical system by the field. Clements proceeds to advocate a naturalistic theory of bioethics that reinstates primary human values.

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