: George Khushf
: Handbook of Bioethics
: Kluwer Academic Publishers
: 9781402021275
: 1
: CHF 210.40
:
: Philosophie, Religion
: English
: 580
: DRM
: PC/MAC/eReader/Tablet
: PDF
This book is for those interested in an extensive review of the field of bioethics. It is for philosophers who wish to understand the core conceptual issues in health care ethics, and for bioethicists who wish to better understand classical problems in philosophy that have a bearing on health care ethics."The Handbook of Bioethics: Taking Stock of the Field from a Philosophical Perspective": presents a comprehensive survey of bioethics in one volume;

has 27 of the most prominent scholars in the field take stock of the issues they helped define; contains essays that outline areas where future research is needed; identifies potential areas for fruitful collaboration between traditional philosophers and bioethicists; and is an ideal text for graduate or upper level undergraduate courses.   
THE LOGIC OF HEALTH CONCEPTS (p.205)

I. INTRODUCTION

It is often maintained that health is one of the major goals of medicine or even the goal of medicine. This idea has been eloquently formulated by the American philosophers of medicine Edmund Pellegrino and David Thomasma in their book A Philosophical Basis of Medical Practice (1981, p. 26):

Medicine is an activity whose essence lies in the clinical event, which demands that scientific and other knowledge be particularised in the lived reality of a particular human for the purpose of attaining health or curing illness through the direct manipulation of the body and in a value-laden decision matrix.

Although some other goals of medicine exist, such as saving lives and advancing quality of life, health is still taken to be the central goal of medicine and health care in general. However, the formidable task of interpreting the nature of health remains. What more specifically is health? To what more precise goal shall we direct our efforts in medicine and health care?

These questions are not simply academic. They are of great practical and thereby ethical concern. The consequences for health care diverge considerably, not least in economic but also in social and educational terms, if health is understood as people’s happiness with life, or their fitness and ability to work, or just the absence of obvious pathology in their bodies and minds. There are adherents of all these ideas in the modern theoretical discussion on health.

One of the major problems in this discussion is to establish the relation between the notion of disease and that of health. Are the two notions directly linked, so that health is the total absence of disease, or is there a much looser connection? Is health something over and above the absence of disease? Is health even compatible with the existence of disease? We seem to have varying intuitions in this regard. We seem also inclined to interpret health slightly differently in different contexts.

In this paper I will attempt to disentangle such issues by presenting, in some detail, two prominent theories of health (a biostatistical theory of health, BST, and a holistic theory of health, HTH) and try to assess these using two criteria for assessment, viz. their usefulness in medical practice and in public health contexts. My general conclusion will be that the holistic theory, HTH, is the more plausible theory of health.

II. TWO FUNDAMENTAL APPROACHES TO HEALTH CONCEPTS

Contemporary philosophy of health is very much focused on the problem of determining the nature of the concepts of health, illness and disease from a scientific point of view. Some theorists claim and argue that these concepts are value-free and descriptive in the same sense as the concepts of atom, metal and rain are value-free and descriptive.

Moreover, a disease in a human being can be discovered, according to this line of thought, through ordinary inspection and through the use of scientifically validated procedures without invoking any normative evaluations of the person’s body or mind. To say that a person has a certain disease or that he or she is unhealthy is thus to objectively describe this person.
TABLE OF CONTENTS6
INTRODUCTION: TAKING STOCK OF BIOETHICS FROM A PHILOSOPHICAL PERSPECTIVE8
SECTION I THE EMERGENCE OF BIOETHICS37
THE HISTORY OF BIOETHICS AS A DISCIPLINE38
SECTION II BIOETHICAL THEORY60
PRINCIPLES AND PRINCIPLISM62
CASUISTRY82
VIRTUE THEORY IN PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICINE96
COMMON MORALITY128
FEMINIST APPROACHES TO BIOETHICS150
FOUR NARRATIVE APPROACHES TO BIOETHICS170
PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICINE AND MEDICAL ETHICS: A PHENOMENOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE190
SECTION III CORE CONCEPTS IN CLINICAL ETHICS211
THE LOGIC OF HEALTH CONCEPTS212
PHYSICIANS AND PATIENTS IN RELATION: CLINICAL INTERPRETATION AND DIALOGUES OF TRUST230
INFORMED CONSENT258
PHILOSOPHICAL CHALLENGES TO THE USE OF ADVANCE DIRECTIVES298
ETHICS COMMITTEES AND CASE CONSULTATION: THEORY AND PRACTICE322
SECTION IV THE PUBLIC POLICY CONTEXT343
THE ETHICS OF CONTROLLED CLINICAL TRIALS344
ETHICAL ISSUES IN THE USE OF COST EFFECTIVENESS ANALYSIS FOR THE PRIORITIZATION OF HEALTH RESOURCES360
SIC ET NON: SOME DISPUTED QUESTIONS IN REPRODUCTIVE ETHICS388
TESTING GENES AND CONSTRUCTING HUMANS – ETHICS AND GENETICS422
SECTION V FOUNDATIONS OF THE HEALTH PROFESSIONS447
DEATH, DYING, EUTHANASIA, AND PALLIATIVE CARE: PERSPECTIVES FROM PHILOSOPHY OF MEDICINE AND ETHICS448
PHILOSOPHICAL ISSUES IN PSYCHIATRY480
NURSING ETHICS496
GEROETHICS514
ETHICS AND PHILOSOPHY OF PUBLIC HEALTH532
NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS556
INDEX560
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