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  1. Behind Closed Doors: Promises and Pitfalls of Ethics Committees.Bernard Lo - forthcoming - Bioethics.
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  • Bioethics committees: the health care provider's guide.Bowen Hosford - 1986 - Rockville, Md.: Aspen Systems.
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  • Pastoral care representation on the hospital ethics committee.MartinL Smith & Doug Burleigh - 1991 - HEC Forum 3 (5):269-276.
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  • Who shall live when not all can live?James F. Childress in, R. B. Edwards & G. C. Graber - 1988 - In Rem Blanchard Edwards & Glenn C. Graber (eds.), Bioethics. Harcourt, Wadsworth.
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  • Determinants of hospital ethics committee success.Linda S. Scheirton - 1992 - HEC Forum 4 (6):342-359.
    In December 1990, an empirical study assessing hospital ethics committee (HEC) success was completed. Success was measured in terms of the number of interventions undertaken by the committees in four functional areas: education, guidelines development, prospective and retrospective case review. Some commonly quoted success determinants, such as multidisciplinarity, physician chairpersons, and a high institutional status of the chairperson were found not to foster success; the latter two, actually decreased committee success.
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  • Does Legislating Hospital Ethics Committees Make a Difference?. A Study of Hospital Ethics Committees in Maryland, the District of Columbia, and Virginia.Diane E. Hoffmann - 1991 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 19 (1-2):105-119.
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  • Successes and Failures of Hospital Ethics Committees: A National Survey of Ethics Committee Chairs.Glenn Mcgee, Joshua P. Spanogle, Arthur L. Caplan, Dina Penny & David A. Asch - 2002 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (1):87-93.
    In 1992, the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) passed a mandate that all its approved hospitals put in place a means for addressing ethical concerns.Although the particular process the hospital uses to address such concernsmay vary, the hospital or healthcare ethics committee (HEC) is used most often. In a companion study to that reported here, we found that in 1998 over 90% of U.S. hospitals had ethics committees, compared to just 1% in 1983, and that many (...)
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  • Beyond Caring: Hospitals, Nurses, and the Social Organization of Ethics.Raymond DeVries & Daniel F. Chambliss - 1997 - Hastings Center Report 27 (4):41.
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  • Ethics in Clinical Practice.Judith C. Ahronheim, Jonathan Moreno, Connie Zuckerman & Laurence B. McCullough - 1995 - HEC Forum 7 (6):377-378.
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  • Ethics Committees and Social Issues: Potentials and Pitfalls.Daniel Callahan - 1992 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1 (1):5.
    When the Karen Ann Quinlan case emerged in the mid-1970s and the New Jersey Supreme Court made mention of the role that ethics committees might play in such cases, no one could have predicted at the time what the consequences of that observation might be. It took a while for momentum to build, but we are now seeing the flowering of what is an important movement in the field of bioethics: the interplay of ethics committees and broader societal issues.
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  • Healthcare ethics committees and the law: Uneasy but inevitable bedfellows. [REVIEW]Kenneth De Ville & Gregory Hassler - 2001 - HEC Forum 13 (1):13-31.
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  • Health care ethics committees: The next generation. [REVIEW]J. W. Ross, J. W. Glaser, D. Rasinski-Gregory, J. M. Gibson, C. Bayley & Giles R. Scofield - 1994 - HEC Forum 6 (3):157-162.
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  • For Experts Only? Access to Hospital Ethics Committees.George J. Agich & Stuart J. Youngner - 1991 - Hastings Center Report 21 (5):17-24.
    How closely involved with hospital ethics committees should patients and their families become? Should they routinely have access to committees, or be empowered to initiate consultations? To what extent should they be informed of the content or outcome of committee deliberations? Seeing ethics committees as the locus of competing responsibilities allows us to respond to the questions posed by a patient rights model and to acknowledge more fully the complex moral dynamics of clinical medicine.
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