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Malignant Medical Ethicists Confront Cancer,0199757844,9780199757848

Malignant Medical Ethicists Confront Cancer

Author : Rebecca Dresser
 
ISBN

0199757844

ISBN13

9780199757848

PublisherOxford University Press
Published In2012
BindingHardback
Weight0.44 lbs
Bibliopp. 264
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About The Book

"You have cancer." Words no one wants to hear, but heard by millions every year. Millions more hear the equally shattering News that a loved one has cancer. Both are life-changing messages. For the people Writing this book, Cancer was not only a personal crisis, it was also an education. Experts on Medical ethics, personal experience with cancer showed them how Little they understood of the real World of serious illness. Despite years of Teaching and writing about treatment decision-making and patient autonomy, they were unprepared for many of the problems they faced. They discovered that the rights and wrongs of cancer care were more complicated than they had anticipated. Ethics outside the Hospital Walls took on unexpected significance as they discovered the astonishing generosity, and the unintentional cruelty, that cancer provokes in others. Cancer was a test of personal character, too, as patients accustomed to control became dependent on others and caregivers shouldered unfamiliar and difficult responsibilities.
In chapters on cancer diagnosis, treatment choices, and Research participation, the Authors examine medical ethics from the personal point of view. In chapters on Family caregiving, cancer interactions, and cancer support groups, they consider ethics outside the medical setting. In chapters on mortality and survivorship, they reflect on cancer's personal moral teachings.
Cancer is an unavoidable feature of modern life. Readers will come away with a deeper understanding of what it is like to have cancer, better equipped to respond to cancer in their own lives and the lives of others. The Book also offers insights to doctors and nurses seeking to improve cancer treatment and to medical ethicists seeking to make their work more relevant to patients and caregivers.
"Rebecca Dresser's idea for a book on cancer was an inspired one. In bringing together a group of people from the field of bioethics with personal experience of cancer, as survivors or caretakers, we see in moving detail what it is like to wrestle with the disease. It will offer those with cancer or caring for those with it uncommon Insight and wisdom. If one has to think about or deal with the disease, one can hardly ask for more."- Dan Callahan, The Hastings Center


About the Author

Dresser is the Daniel Noyes Kirby Professor of Law and Professor of Ethics in Medicine at Washington University in St. Louis


Features

* The authors are bioethics scholars and teachers who were used to thinking about cancer from a professional, academic perspective but who came to understand in a different light when they encountered the illness in their personal lives.
* Unlike most cancer narratives, this book brings together a group of perspectives rather than giving voice to only one.
* The authors have different values and social backgrounds, as well as training in different disciplines (medicine, philosophy, law, sociology, and anthropology). This diversity enables them to consider a wider range of clinical and policy matters than those addressed by individual authors.


Review

"Rebecca Dresser's idea for a book on cancer was an inspired one. In bringing together a group of people from the field of bioethics with personal experience of cancer, as survivors or caretakers, we see in moving detail what it is like to wrestle with the disease. It will offer those with cancer or caring for those with it uncommon insight and wisdom. If one has to think about or deal with the disease, one can hardly ask for more." - Daniel Callahan, The Hastings Center

"The authors in this volume have important things to say about sickness and medicine, from which we can all learn. If you had any question about whether sickness and medical care are fundamentally personal, related to who the sick person is, this readable and interesting book will drive that point home. At the same time, they show that the sick are never sick in isolation, but alongside others whose fates are intimately entwined. Intelligent, thoughtful, and insightful." -- Eric Cassell, Eric Cassell, MD, M.A.C.P.
Emeritus Professor of Public Health, Weill Medical College of Cornell University
Adjunct Professor of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University