Recent years have seen a growing interest in the questions of
ethics and aging. Advances in medical technology have created
dilemmas for physicians, nurses, and other health care
professionals over such questions as the allocation of resources
and a patient's "right to die." At the same time, the aging of the
American population raises concerns about social policies that
involve the role of government. In "Ethics in an Aging Society"
Harry R. Moody examines both the clinical and the policy issues
that center around aging.
Moody pays special attention to the ethical problems associated
with two particularly timely concerns--Alzheimer's disease and the
increasingly controversial issue of "rational suicide" for reasons
of age. He also focuses on the rights of patients in long-term care
and on the question of justice between generations (Are older
patients using more than their "fair share" of scarce health care
dollars?).
"These ethical questions," Moody emphasizes, "are not abstract
ones. They arise in the specific historical and political context
of America in the closing decade of the twentieth century... This
book can best be understood as a meditation on two compelling
liberal ideas--autonomy and justice--that have inspired our
thinking about ethics and the aging society. The story which
unfolds in the book is a story both about the power of those ideals
and also about inescapable facts of old age that make those ideals
problematic."
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