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This volume explores how the scarce resources of intensive care
units should be distributed. Three hypothetical patients, each with
a different chance of survival, desire intensive care. A
multinational panel of experienced critical care physicians offers
assessments of the patients' conditions and outlines approaches to
treatment. These approaches are then examined by academic medical
experts and a medical ethicist, as well as from a legal
perspective. The result is a well-rounded and introspective look at
care for critically ill patients at or near the end of life.
Contemporary Catholic Health Care Ethics, Second Edition,
integrates theology, methodology, and practical application into a
detailed and practical examination of the bioethical issues that
confront students, scholars, and practitioners. Noted bioethicists
Gerard Magill, Henk ten Have, and David F. Kelly contribute diverse
backgrounds and experience that inform the richness of new material
covered in this second edition. The book is organized into three
sections: theology (basic issues underlying Catholic thought),
methodology (how Catholic theology approaches moral issues,
including birth control), and applications to current issues. New
chapters discuss controversial end-of-life issues such as forgoing
treatment, killing versus allowing patients to die, ways to handle
decisions for incompetent patients, advance directives, and
physician-assisted suicide. Unlike anthologies, the coherent text
offers a consistent method in order to provide students, scholars,
and practitioners with an understanding of ethical dilemmas as well
as concrete examples to assist in the difficult decisions they must
make on an everyday basis.
For over thirty years, David F. Kelly has worked with medical
practitioners, students, families, and the sick and dying to
confront the difficult and often painful issues that concern
medical treatment at the end of life. In this short and practical
book, Kelly shares his vast experience, providing a rich resource
for thinking about life's most painful decisions. Kelly outlines
eight major issues regarding end-of-life care as seen through the
lens of the Catholic medical ethics tradition. He looks at the
distinction between ordinary and extraordinary means; the
difference between killing and allowing to die; criteria of patient
competence; what to do in the case of incompetent patients; the
meaning and use of advance directives; the morality of hydration
and nutrition; physician-assisted suicide and euthanasia; and,
medical futility. Kelly's analysis is sprinkled with significant
legal decisions and, throughout, elaborations on how the Catholic
medical ethics tradition - as well as teachings of bishops and
popes - understands each issue. He provides a helpful glossary to
supplement his introduction to the terminology used by
philosophical health care ethics. Included in Kelly's discussion is
his lucid description of why the Catholic tradition supports the
discontinuation of medical care in the Terry Schiavo case. He also
explores John Paul II's controversial papal allocution concerning
hydration and nutrition for unconscious patients, arguing that the
Catholic tradition does not require feeding the permanently
unconscious. "Medical Care at the End of Life" addresses the major
issues that inform this last stage of caregiving. It offers a
critical guide to understanding the medical ethics and relevant
legal cases needed for clear thinking when individuals are faced
with those crucial decisions.
This volume explores how the scarce resources of intensive care
units should be distributed. Three hypothetical patients, each with
a different chance of survival, desire intensive care. A
multinational panel of experienced critical care physicians offers
assessments of the patients' conditions and outlines approaches to
treatment. These approaches are then examined by academic medical
experts and a medical ethicist, as well as from a legal
perspective. The result is a well-rounded and introspective look at
care for critically ill patients at or near the end of life.
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