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  1. The Healer's Power.Howard Brody - 1992 - Yale University Press.
    Although the physician’s use and misuse of power have been discussed in the social sciences and in literature, they have never been explored in medical ethics until now. In this book, Dr. Howard Brody argues that the central task is not to reduce the physician’s power, as others have suggested, but to develop guidelines for its use, so that the doctor shares with the patient both information and the responsibility for deciding on appropriate treatment. Dr. Brody first reviews literary works (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Foundations of Bioethics.H. Tristham Engelhardt - 1986 - Hypatia 4 (2):179-185.
    This review essay examines H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr.'s The Foundations of Bioethics, a contemporary nonfeminist text in mainstream biomedical ethics. It focuses upon a central concept, Engelhardt's idea of the moral community and argues that the most serious problem in the book is its failure to take account of the political and social structures of moral communities, structures which deeply affect issues in biomedical ethics.
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  • Coping with ambiguity and uncertainty in patient-physician relationships: I. Leadership of a physician. [REVIEW]Charles B. Rodning - 1992 - Journal of Medical Humanities 13 (2):91-101.
    A patient-physician relationship provides a milieu for a patient to achieve healing, solace, and reintegration of personhood. A patient's primary physician assumes a leadership role in that regard, coordinating and facilitating a regimen of analysis and therapy. The quality, quantity, and rapidity of technological advancements in the delivery of medical care, render any individual physician incomplete in terms of his ability to provide total care. Consequently, a succession of professional and paraprofessional personnel must be involved to maximize the care rendered. (...)
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  • Review of Edmund D. Pellegrino: For the patient's good: the restoration of beneficence in health care[REVIEW]Donald VanDeVeer - 1990 - Ethics 100 (2):434-436.
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  • Models for Ethical Medicine in a Revolutionary Age.Robert M. Veatch - 1972 - Hastings Center Report 2 (3):5-7.
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  • The Function of Medicine.Eric J. Cassell - 1977 - Hastings Center Report 7 (6):16-19.
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  • The Ideal of Shared Decision Making Between Physicians and Patients.Dan W. Brock - 1991 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 1 (1):28-47.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Ideal of Shared Decision Making Between Physicians and PatientsDan W. Brock (bio)IntroductionShared treatment decision making, with its division of labor between physician and patient, is a common ideal in medical ethics for the physician-patient relationship.1 Most simply put, the physician's role is to use his or her training, knowledge, and experience to provide the patient with facts about the diagnosis and about the prognoses without treatment and with (...)
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  • Modern Ethics, Teleology, and the Love of Self.Henry B. Veatch - 1992 - The Monist 75 (1):52-70.
    “Modern ethics,” so-called, has only in the most recent years come under some very sharp and telling, not to say even devastating, criticism. And what is it that one should understand by this term, “modern ethics”? Well, it is a term used largely by very recent critics to designate that whole tradition in ethics, in part utilitarian and in part Kantian in character, that has quite dominated the study of ethics, at least in Anglo-American philosophy, for upwards of three-quarters of (...)
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  • (1 other version)The Patient as Person.Paul Ramsey & Catherine Lyons - 1972 - Religious Studies 8 (2):187-188.
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  • Models of the Doctor-Patient Relationship and the Ethics Committee: Part One.David C. Thomasma - 1992 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1 (1):11.
    Past ages of medical care are condemned in modern philosophical and medical literature as being too paternalistic. The normal account of good medicine in the past was, indeed, paternalistic in an offensive way to modern persons. Imagine a Jean Paul Sartre going to the doctor and being treated without his consent or even his knowledge of what will transpire during treatment! From Hippocratic times until shortly after World War II, medicine operated in a closed, clubby manner. The knowledge learned in (...)
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