Patient as Victim and Vector, New Edition
Patient as Victim and Vector, New Edition
Ethics and Infectious Disease
Battin, Margaret P.
Oxford University Press Inc
10/2021
592
Mole
Inglês
9780197564547
15 a 20 dias
842
Part I: Seeing Infectious Disease as Central
1. Seeing Infectious Disease as Central
2. The Biological Basics of Infectious Disease
3. Characteristics of Infectious Disease that Raise Distinctive Challenges for Bioethics
4. How Infectious Disease Got Left Out of Bioethics
5. Closing the Book on Infectious Disease: The Mischievous Consequences for Public Health
Part II: Theoretical Considerations
6. Embedded Autonomy and the "Way-Station Self"
7. Thinking about Infectious Disease: The Multiple Perspectives of the PVV View
Part III: Dilemmas Old and New: Health Care Dilemmas Through the Lens of Infectious Disease
8. Old Wine in New Bottles: Traditional Issues in Bioethics from the Victim/Vector Perspective
9. From the Magic Mountain to a Dying Homeless Man and His Dog: Imposing Isolation and Treatment in Tuberculosis Care
10. The Ethics of Research in Infectious Disease: Experimenting on This Patient, Risking Harm to That One
11. Vertically-Transmitted Infection: Are the Medical and Public Health Responses Consistent?
12. Should Rapid Tests for HIV Infection Now Be "Mandatory" During Pregnancy or in Labor?
13. Antimicrobial Resistance
14. Immunization and the HPV Vaccine
Part IV: Constraints and the Question of What We Owe Each Other As Victims and Vectors
15. A Thought Experiment: Rapid Testing for Infectious Disease in Airports and Places of Public Contact
16. Constraints in the Control of Infectious Disease
17. Pandemic Planning: What is Ethically Justified?
18. Compensation and the Victims of Constraint
19. Pandemic Planning and the Justice of Health Care Distribution
Part V: Making Use of the PVV View
20. Thinking Bi: Emerging Global Efforts for the Control of Infectious Disease
21. "The Patient as Victim and Vector" Approach as a Critical and Diagnostic Tool for Philosophical Ethics and Public Policy
References.
Part I: Seeing Infectious Disease as Central
1. Seeing Infectious Disease as Central
2. The Biological Basics of Infectious Disease
3. Characteristics of Infectious Disease that Raise Distinctive Challenges for Bioethics
4. How Infectious Disease Got Left Out of Bioethics
5. Closing the Book on Infectious Disease: The Mischievous Consequences for Public Health
Part II: Theoretical Considerations
6. Embedded Autonomy and the "Way-Station Self"
7. Thinking about Infectious Disease: The Multiple Perspectives of the PVV View
Part III: Dilemmas Old and New: Health Care Dilemmas Through the Lens of Infectious Disease
8. Old Wine in New Bottles: Traditional Issues in Bioethics from the Victim/Vector Perspective
9. From the Magic Mountain to a Dying Homeless Man and His Dog: Imposing Isolation and Treatment in Tuberculosis Care
10. The Ethics of Research in Infectious Disease: Experimenting on This Patient, Risking Harm to That One
11. Vertically-Transmitted Infection: Are the Medical and Public Health Responses Consistent?
12. Should Rapid Tests for HIV Infection Now Be "Mandatory" During Pregnancy or in Labor?
13. Antimicrobial Resistance
14. Immunization and the HPV Vaccine
Part IV: Constraints and the Question of What We Owe Each Other As Victims and Vectors
15. A Thought Experiment: Rapid Testing for Infectious Disease in Airports and Places of Public Contact
16. Constraints in the Control of Infectious Disease
17. Pandemic Planning: What is Ethically Justified?
18. Compensation and the Victims of Constraint
19. Pandemic Planning and the Justice of Health Care Distribution
Part V: Making Use of the PVV View
20. Thinking Bi: Emerging Global Efforts for the Control of Infectious Disease
21. "The Patient as Victim and Vector" Approach as a Critical and Diagnostic Tool for Philosophical Ethics and Public Policy
References.