dc.creator | Nelson, James Lindemann | en |
dc.date.accessioned | 2015-05-05T18:45:34Z | en |
dc.date.available | 2015-05-05T18:45:34Z | en |
dc.date.created | 1992-07 | en |
dc.date.issued | 1992-07 | en |
dc.identifier | 10.2307/3563016 | en |
dc.identifier.bibliographicCitation | Hastings Center Report. 1992 Jul-Aug; 22(4): 6-12. | en |
dc.identifier.issn | 0093-0334 | en |
dc.identifier.uri | http://worldcatlibraries.org/registry/gateway?version=1.0&url_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&atitle=Taking+Families+Seriously&title=Hastings+Center+Report.++&volume=22&issue=4&pages=6-12&date=1992&au=Nelson,+James+Lindemann | en |
dc.identifier.uri | http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3563016 | en |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10822/740800 | en |
dc.description.abstract | Here, I attend particularly to how families are affected, not by
reproductive technologies, but by day-to-day patterns of medical practice,
decisionmaking in particular. Succinctly stated, what I find is this:
standard accounts of medical ethics obscure what is particularly morally
significant about families. Medical practice, influenced by those accounts as
well as by its own traditions, can dishonor, sometimes possibly erode, those
morally important features. What I will propose in response is a modification
of the received view of how medical decisionmaking ought to occur that is
sensitive both to the important values featured by current practice, and to
values arising out of intimate relationships that current practice neglects.
But the concerns I raise do have implications for reproduction,
confidentiality, indeed for the whole way in which we tend to think about the
role of families in healing. | en |
dc.format | Article | en |
dc.language | en | en |
dc.source | BRL:KIE/37265 | en |
dc.subject | Advance Directives | en |
dc.subject | Allowing to Die | en |
dc.subject | Autonomy | en |
dc.subject | Beneficence | en |
dc.subject | Bioethics | en |
dc.subject | Competence | en |
dc.subject | Confidentiality | en |
dc.subject | Consent | en |
dc.subject | Decision Making | en |
dc.subject | Economics | en |
dc.subject | Ethical Theory | en |
dc.subject | Ethics | en |
dc.subject | Family Relationship | en |
dc.subject | Human Experimentation | en |
dc.subject | Informed Consent | en |
dc.subject | Justice | en |
dc.subject | Love | en |
dc.subject | Medical Ethics | en |
dc.subject | Moral Policy | en |
dc.subject | Parent Child Relationship | en |
dc.subject | Paternalism | en |
dc.subject | Patient Care | en |
dc.subject | Patients | en |
dc.subject | Reproduction | en |
dc.subject | Reproductive Technologies | en |
dc.subject | Social Interaction | en |
dc.subject | Third Party Consent | en |
dc.subject | Treatment Refusal | en |
dc.subject | Values | en |
dc.title | Taking Families Seriously | en |
dc.provenance | Digital citation created by the National Reference Center for Bioethics Literature at Georgetown University for the BIOETHICSLINE database, part of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics' Bioethics Information Retrieval Project funded by the United States National Library of Medicine. | en |
dc.provenance | Digital citation migrated from OpenText LiveLink Discovery Server database named NBIO hosted by the Bioethics Research Library to the DSpace collection BioethicsLine hosted by Georgetown University. | en |