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Am I My Brother's Keeper?
The Ethical Frontiers of Biomedicine
Published by: Indiana University Press
1 bibliog.
- eBook
- 9780253113740
- Published: January 1998
$9.99
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". . . this book is though-provoking, bringing a scientist's reason and a moralist's outrage to bear on a subject that's largely escaped attention." —Wired
"Caplan's choice of topics is broad and his opinions challenging. . . . This volume will interest the general public. It is a good survey of a broad range of ethical issues, as seen by one prominent bioethicist who has thought much about the subject. Caplan's well-merited reputation as a commentator and interpreter between the scholarly and the public arena is reaffirmed in this book." —The Washington Post
"Arthur Caplan—with assiduous effort, unflagging energy, encyclopedic knowledge, and imposing talent—has become America's most visible commentator on bioethics." —The Philadelphia Inquirer
"Arthur Caplan is perhaps the most quoted bioethicist in the US and this new collection of essays illustrates why." —Nature Medicine
". . . an important book of essays addressing the most problematic and persistent questions in the realm of contemporary bioethics. He offers a highly readable text balancing irony and incisive analysis with a palpable sense of moral urgency as he confronts a variety of subjects." —Curtis W. Hart, BCC
"Careful consideration of some of the knottier bioethical problems of our times, by the director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania, who fears that cynicism and mistrust have eroded our ability to see ourselves as our brothers' keepers." —Kirkus Reviews
"Caplan's particular skill is an ability to identify, analyze, and explain the extremely complex moral questions that grow out of changes in health care, science, and medicine." —The New York Times Magazine
"An important critical voice for American medicine." —The New England Journal of Medicine
". . . a useful introduction to a variety of bioethical issues." —Library Journal
In this impassioned book, Arthur L. Caplan, America's leading bioethicist, calls for an end to cynicism and mistrust in our approach to resolving health care issues. He brings this vision to discussions of some of the most exciting issues at the frontiers of medical ethics today—including doctor-assisted suicide, gene therapy, and the headline-grabbing case of Dolly the sheep and the possibility that human beings might one day be cloned.
Introduction
Part I. Research, Experimentation and Innovation
1. And Baby Makes—Moral Muddles
2. The Intrusion of Evil: The Use of Data from Unethical Medical Experiments
3. Have a Heart? The Ethical Lessons of the Development of the Total Artificial Heart
4. "What A Long, Strange Trip It's Been": The Debate Over the Use of Fetal Tissue for
Transplantation Research
Part II. Starting and Stopping Medical Treatment for the Very Young and Very Old
5. Hard Cases Make Bad Law: The Legacy of the Baby Doe Controversy
6. Analogies to the Holocaust and Contemporary Bioethical Disputes About Assisted Suicide
and Euthanasia
7. Will Dr. Kevorkian Kill Hospice?
8. Odds and Ends
Part III. Transplantation
9. No Sale: Markets, Organs, and Tissues
10. Is the Use of Animal Organs for Transplants Immoral?
11. Am I My Brother's Keeper? Ethics and the Use of Living Donors
Part IV. Health Policy
12. Dead as a Doornail
13. Sinners, Saints, and Access to Health Care
14. The Ethics of Gatekeepers
Part V. What Is Your Doctor Trying to Do to You?
15. Who Says You're Sick?
16. Curing What Ails the Medical Model
17. If Gene Therapy Is the Cure, What's the Disease?
18. What's Wrong with Eugenics?
References
Index
Arthur L. Caplan is Trustee Professor of Bioethics and Director, The Center for Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania. His books include If I Were a Rich Man, Could I Buy a Pancreas? (also published by Indiana University Press) and Moral Matters: Ethical Issues in Medicine and the Life Sciences. He has served as a member of President Clinton's Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses and as Chair of the Advisory Panel on Blood Safety and Availability for the Department of Health and Human Services/Food and Drug Administration.