Oxford University Press, USA
What Patients Teach: The Everyday Ethics of Health Care
What Patients Teach: The Everyday Ethics of Health Care
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healthcare professionals. This book answers two basic questions: As patients see it, what things allow relationships with healthcare providers to become therapeutic? What can this teach us about healthcare ethics? This volume presents detailed descriptions and analyses of 50 interviews with 58
patients, representing a wide spectrum of illnesses and clinician specialties. The authors argue that the structure, rhythm, and horizon of routine patient care are ultimately grounded in patient vulnerability and clinician responsiveness. From the short interview segments, the longer vignettes and
the full patient stories presented here emerge the neglected dimensions of healthcare and healthcare ethics. What becomes visible is an ethics of everyday interdependence, with mutual responsibilities that follow from this moral symbiosis. Both professional expressions of healthcare ethics and the
field of bioethics need to be informed and reformed by this distinctive, more patient-centered, turn in how we understand both patient care as a whole and the ethics of care more specifically. The final chapters present revised codes of ethics for health professionals, as well as the implications
for medical and health professions education.
Author: Larry R. Churchill, Joseph B. Fanning, David Schenck
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 09/19/2013
Pages: 208
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.70lbs
Size: 8.30h x 5.60w x 1.00d
ISBN: 9780199331185
Review Citation(s):
Choice 06/01/2014
About the Author
Larry R. Churchill is the Anne Geddes Stahlman Professor of Medical Ethics, Professor of Medicine and Professor of Philosophy and Religion at Vanderbilt. His major works include a 1987 book Rationing Health Care in America (Univ. of Notre Dame Press), a 1994 book Self-Interest and Universal Health Care (Harvard Univ. Press, selected a Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Book for 1995). With Marion Danis and Carolyn Clancy he edited Ethical Dimensions of Health Policy, (Oxford University Press) in 2002. His most recent book, with David Schenck, is Healers: Extraordinary Clinicians at Work (Oxford Univ. Press, 2011). Churchill's work in ethics and health policy was the basis for his election to the Institute of Medicine, National Academy of Sciences, in 1991, and his selection as a Fellow of the Hastings Center in 2000.
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