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Köp båda 2 för 1417 kr"There is not a weak chapter in the book. All are written clearly and cogently, and the editors specified a common format that serves very well to make all the principal ideas in each chapter readily accessible...It both provokes analysis and thought and provides a solid foundation for teaching...Overall, this book accomplishes exactly what the editors intended; it provides a solid foundation for the teaching of ethics to young surgeons...It will be considerable value to any member of the surgical team with interest in these issues."--Medical Humanities Review Advance praise for Surgical Ethics "Surgery involves remarkable degrees of commitment and trust on the part of surgeons, their patients, teams, and trainees. McCullough, Jones, and Brody have assembled here the first universal compendium of the content and enigmas of surgical ethics. This complex web of human relationships is of the utmost importance to the effectiveness, safety, and social acceptability of modern surgical care. The authors Nare to be congratulated on this wonderful book."--Francis D. Moore, M.D., Moseley Professor of Surgery, Harvard Medical School, and Surgeon-in-Chief, Emeritus, Peter Bent Brigham Hospital "This remarkable volume fills a long-vacant niche in the surgical literature. Ethical problems of all kinds that confront the surgeon are discussed with sensitivity and common sense, without resorting to quick fixes or pat answers where there are none. It should be required reading for all surgical teachers and residents in training."--Thomas B. Ferguson, M.D., Emeritus Professor of Surgery, Washington University School of Medicine and Editor,Annals of Thoracic Surgery "The editors have asked teams of surgeons and ethicists to describe here their detailed considerations of ethical problems and resolutions as references and intellectual stimulants for the surgical profession. I am pleased that they have been able to do so comprehensively, authoritatively, and interestingly. There is little question in my mind that all surgeons will benefit from reading Surgical Ethics, and that it will help all of us as we face the emerging problems of surgical practice in the twenty-first century."--Paul A. Ebert, M.D., Director, American College of Surgeons (from the Foreword) "This is the first textbook devoted exclusively to ethical issues in surgery, and it provides a pragmatic clinical guide to this subject for all members of the surgical health care team. The three editors, including one surgeon, are authorities on medical ethics. Each of the 19 chapters is co-authored by a clinician and a bioethicist. The contributors are 40 distinguished faculty members from medical schools throughout the United States... This excellent, much-needed book serves as a review and a convenient single-source reference to most contemporary ethical issues in surgery. The book would be a valuable addition to the personal libraries of the surgical healthcare team as well as medical school and hospital libraries."--Doody's Health Sciences Book Review "This excellent, much-needed book serves as a review and a convenient single-source reference to most contemporary ethical issues in surgery. The book would be a valuable addition to the personal libraries of the surgical healthcare team as well as medical school and hospital libraries."--Doody's Journal "...this book belongs in every medical library where surgical training programs exist, as well as in the library of every practicing surgeon--not only as a constant reminder of essential principles but as a well-thumbed and frequently read tome....It adds a much-needed touch of soul to the body of surgical literature."--Archives of Surgery "Surgical Ethics fills a gap in the ethics literature and fills it well....The editors...have effectively used a team approach in which a surgeon and an ethicist collaborate on each of the 19 chapters devoted to major issues in
<br>Laurence B. McCullough, Ph.D., is Professor of Medicine, Community Medicine and Medical Ethics at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX. He is also the author, with Frank A. Chervenak, of Ethics in Obstetrics and Gynecology (OUP, 1994).<br>James W. Jones, M.D., Ph.D., is Professor of Surgery, Cell Biology and Medical Ethics at Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX. He is also Chief of Surgical Service at the Houston Veterans Affairs Medical Center.<br>Baruch A. Brody, Ph.D., is the Leon Jaworski Professor of Biomedical Ethics and Director of the Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy at Baylor College of Medicine. He is also Professor of Philosophy at Rice University. His previous books include Life and Death Decision Making (OUP, 1988) and Ethical Issues in Drug Testing, Approval, and Pricing (OUP, 1995).<br>
Paul A. Ebert (American College of Surgeons, Chicago): Foreword Preface Laurence B. McCullough, James W. Jones, and Baruch A. Brody (all at Baylor College of Medicine): 1. Principles and Practice of Surgical Ethics Laurence B. McCullough, James W. Jones, and Baruch A. Brody: 2. Informed Consent: Autonomous Decision Making of the Surgical Patient Mary Faith Marshall and C.D. Smith, III (both at Medical University of South Carolina): 3. Confidentiality in Surgical Practice Stuart J. Younger and Jerry M. Shuck (both at Case Western Reserve): 4. Advance Directives and the Determination of Death Kenneth L. Mattox and H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr. (both at Baylor College of Medicine): 5. Emergency Patients: Serious Moral Choices, with Limited Time, Information, and Patient Participation Robert M. Arnold (University of Pittsburgh), Byers W. Shaw (University of Nebraska), and Ruth Purtilo (Creighton University): 6. The Acute, High-Risk Patient: The Case of Transplantation Jeremy Sugarman and Robert Harland (both at Duke University): 7. Acute Yet Non-Emergent Patients Andrew Lustig and Peter Scardino (both at Baylor College of Medicine): 8. Elective Patients Amir Halevy and John C. Baldwin (both at Baylor College of Medicine): 9. The Poor Surgical Risk Patient Stephen Wear, Robert Milch (both at SUNY, Buffalo), and W. Lynn Weaver (Morehouse School of Medicine): 10. Care of the Dying Patient Jonathan D. Moreno (University of Virginia) and Frank E. Lucente (SUNY Health Sciences Center, Brooklyn): 11. Patients Who are Family Members, Friends, Colleagues, Family Members of Colleagues Joel E. Frader (Northwestern University) and Donna A. Caniano (Ohio State University): 12. Research and Innovation in Surgery Loretta M. Kopelman, Donald R. Lannin, and Arthur E. Kopelman (all at East Carolina University): 13. Preventing and Managing Unwarranted Biases against Patients R. Scott Jones (both at University of Virginia) and John C. Fletcher: 14. Self-Regulation of Surgical Practice and Research Nancy S. Jecker and Margaret D. Allen (both at University of Washington): 15. Surgery and Other Medical Specialties Ruth Purtilo (Creighton University), W. Byers Shaw (University of Nebraska) Robert Arnold (University of Pittsburgh): 16. Obligations of Surgeons to Non-Physician Team Members and Trainees Kenneth V. Iserson and Bruce E. Jarrell (both at University of Arizona): 17. Financial Relationships with Patients George Khushf and Robert Gifford (both at University of South Carolina): 18. Understanding, Assessing, and Managing Conflicts of Interest Kevin Wm. Wildes and Robert B. Wallace (both at Georgetown University): 19. Relationships with Payers and Institutions that Manage and Deliver Patient Services