Health care and the ethics of encounter : a Jewish discussion of social justice /
The last several years have seen a sharpening of debate in the United States regarding the problem of steadily increasing medical expenditures, as well as inflation in health care costs, a scarcity of health care resources, and a lack of access for a growing number of people in the national health c...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Chapel Hill :
University of North Carolina Press,
©1999.
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Colección: | Studies in social medicine.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Part I.A Crisis in Health Care and a Challenge in Ethics
- 1. Language, Narrative, and Desire: What We Yearn For
- Notes
- 2. Oregon: A Conversation Once Entered
- Why Care about Oregon?
- Oregon Faces the Economic Downturn
- Provision and Community: How Health Care Is Organized, or Working for Health Benefits
- Providing for the Other America: The Medicaid Project
- The Crisis Unfolds in the States
- The Oregon Narrative
- The OHD: A Commitment to Civic Discourse.
- Saying the First No: The Legislature Takes the First Turn at Prioritization
- The OHD Project: The Second Prioritization Discussion
- The Fred Meyer Trust Project: The Third Prioritization
- The Citizens' Principles
- Assessing the Values of the Discourse
- The Oregon Legislature's Response: The Fourth Discussion of Priorities
- The HSC: The Fifth Discussion
- Notes
- 3. The Embodied Discourse of Health Care: Oregon Reconsidered
- Addressing the Normative Problem in Justice: Health Care as a Case in Point
- Framing the Scope of the Problem of Justice in Health Care.
- Justice and the Problem of Scarcity
- The Current Debate: Two Schools
- Autonomy and Beneficence: Rationing Is Not Moral
- The Commonweal: Rafioning Is Morally Necessary
- Assessment of the Oregon Plan
- What Is Wrong with the Plan
- What Is Right with the Plan
- Notes
- 4. Naming the Terrain: The Language of Liberal Justice and Its Claims
- The Formal Principle of Justice
- Beyond the Formal Theory
- The Libertarian Theory of Justice
- Free Holdings and the Problem of Inclusion
- The Utilitarian Theory of Justice
- The Problem of the Majority.
- The implication of the Public-Private Split
- The Problem of the Good
- The Problem of Evil
- Deontology: Duties and the Matrix of Promises
- John Rawls: The Promise of Fairness
- Egalitarian Theories of Justice
- Summary of Justice Approaches Based in Liberal Theory
- Foundational Constraints on All Theories: Scarcity Is Prior to Theory
- Different Terms of the Discourse
- Notes
- 5. The Moral Location of the Self: The Languages of the Alternative Discourse
- The Central Problem: Autonomy and the Entirely Free Self
- An Alternate Model of Community and Citizenship.
- The Nature of the Ideal Moral Agent
- The Moral Agent in the Community
- The Language of Rights, Entitlement, and Need
- Need, Provision, and Membership
- The Concept of Rationality
- Communicative Ethics
- Summary of Challenges to Liberal Theory
- Notes
- Part II. The Texts and the Method: Jewish Ethics as Encounter
- 6. The Discourse Itself: Method, Text, and Covenant
- Responsibility and Relationship: Introduction and Starting Points
- A Framing Issue: Feminism
- Three Postulates: The Centrality of the Daily, the Necessity of Argument, and the Fundamentality of Exile.