Synopses & Reviews
The relationship between law and bioethics and the influence of both on medical research and clinical practice is a topic that is often mentioned but rarely subjected to sustained critical analysis. This book considers a number of issues in medicine in which the influence of the law has been most profound and positive including: informed consent; advance directives; constitutional liberties and privacy; standards for pain management and end-of-life care. The book provides important background material on significant legal and philosophical concepts, terms and principle necessary to an understanding of the legal process and ethical analysis. This work establishes the role of law in medicine and bioethics as being positive and its continuing involvement in the rights of research subjects and patients as a necessity.
Review
`The writing style, like most good American academic texts, is clear, unambiguous and easy to follow. It is a great shame for UK medical practitioners that we do not have a similar book for English, Scottish and European law. This is a book that I will recommend to more enthusiastic students.' Iain Smith, Nuffield Institute for Health, University of Leeds in Journal of Health Organization and Management, 17:6 (2003)
Review
`The writing style, like most good American academic texts, is clear, unambiguous and easy to follow. It is a great shame for UK medical practitioners that we do not have a similar book for English, Scottish and European law. This is a book that I will recommend to more enthusiastic students.'
Iain Smith, Nuffield Institute for Health, University of Leeds in Journal of Health Organization and Management, 17:6 (2003)
Synopsis
The pervasive influence of law on medical practice and clinical bioethics is often noted with a combination of exasperation and lamentation. Physicians and non-physician bioethicists, generally speaking, consider the willingness of courts, legislatures, and regulatory agencies to insinuate themselves into clinical practice and medical research to be a distinctly negative aspect of contemporary American society. They are quick to point out that their colleagues in other Western developed nations are not similarly afflicted, and that the situation which obtains elsewhere is highly preferable to the legalization and purported over-regulation of medicine that has taken place in the United States during the last fifty years. In this book I offer a decidedly different perspective. It is, admittedly, not entirely without personal and professional bias. Prior to becoming a fu- time academic, teaching bioethics in the setting of an academic medical center, I was, for nearly 20 years, an attorney specializing in health law. Even after earning a doctorate in philosophy, I was frequently considered to be the -resident lawyer- on the bioethics faculty, much more frequently looked to for my insights on the law than my perspective as one who had formally studied moral philosophy and applied ethics. I note this not out ofa sense of frustration or disappointment, but as confirmation that even among physicians and n- physician bioethicists, there is widespread recognition that the law does have important contributions to make in assessing the practice ofmedicine and the conduct of medical research.
Table of Contents
Preface. Acknowledgments.
1. Introduction.
2. Medical Ethics and Medical Jurisprudence: The Conceptual Landscape Ethics.
3. A Historical Perspective on the Relationship Between Law and Morality.
4. Law and the Physician-Patient Relationship: Informed Consent in Theory and Practice.
5. From Autonomy to Prospective Autonomy: Advance Directives in Bioethics, Law and Public Policy.
6. Constitutional Liberty and Privacy: The Supreme Court and the Physician-Patient Relationship.
7. The Dance of Intimacy: Abortion, Medical Ethics and the Constitution.
8. Death, Dying, and the Responsibility of the Ethical Physician.
9. The New Synergy - Bioethics in Court.
10. Lessons Learned and Prospects for the Future of Medical Jurisprudence and Bioethics. Index.