This volume brings together researchers from different European countries and disciplines who are involved in Clinical Ethics Consultation (CEC). The work provides an analysis of the theories and methods underlying CEC as well a discussion of practical issues regarding the implementation and evaluation of CEC. The first section deals with different possible approaches in CEC. The authors explore the question of how we should decide complex cases in clinical ethics, that is, which ethical theory, approach or method is most suitable in order to make an informed ethical decision. It also discusses whether clinical ethicists should be ethicists by education or rather well-trained facilitators with some ethical knowledge. The second chapter of this book focuses on practical aspects of the implementation of CEC structures. The analysis of experienced clinical ethicists refers to macro and micro levels in both developed and transitional countries. Research on the evaluation of CEC is at the centre of the final chapter of this volume. In this context conceptual as well as empirical challenges with respect to a sound approach to judgements about the quality of the work of CECs are described and suggestion for further research in this area are made. In summary this volumes brings together theorists and healthcare practitioners with expertise in CEC. In this respect the volume serves as good example for a multi- and interdisciplinary approach to clinical ethics which combines philosophical reasoning and empirical research.
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Product Details
Weight: 600g
Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
Publication Date: 28 Nov 2010
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781409405115
About John-Stewart Gordon
Jan Schildmann MA MD is a researcher in medical ethics and a physician. Following his medical studies at the Charité Medical School Berlin he received his MA in Medical Law and Ethics from King's College University of London. After completing his clinical training in medical oncology and palliative care he joined the Department of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine Ruhr University Bochum as a researcher in medical ethics. Dr Schildmann has published on the ethics of end-of-life care issues the physician-patient relationship and the teaching of ethics and communication in medicine in the Journal of Medical Ethics Medicine Healthcare and Philosophy Palliative Medicine and several other journals. In addition he has co-edited three books on end-of-life decision making clinical ethics and clinical ethics consultation. He has been a visiting researcher at the Centre for Ethics and Communication in Health Care Practice University of Oxford (ETHOX). Dr Schildmann has received several awards including a prize of the European Association for Philosophy in Healthcare and Medicine an Award of Best Practice on communication in oncology and a prize of the International Balint Federation. John-Stewart Gordon MA. in philosophy and history at Konstanz University (2001) Ph.D. in philosophy at Göttingen University (2005). Currently he is Adjunct Assistant Professor in philosophy at Queen's University in Kingston Canada. He is member of the board of Bioethics and area-editor of The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy (IEP). He published two books as a single author Aristoteles über Gerechtigkeit. Das V. Buch der Nikomachischen Ethik (Alber Press 2007) and Bemerkungen zum Begründungstrilemma (Lit Press 2007). Furthermore he is single editor of Morality and Justice (Rowman&Littlefield 2009) and co-editor of Bioethics and Culture (Cambridge University Press 2010). In addition he published peer-reviewed articles in journals/encyclopedia such as Bioethics Journal for Business Economics and Ethics or IEP. He taught philosophy and bioethics at Tübingen University Ruhr-University Bochum Duisburg-Essen University and Queen's University Kingston. Jochen Vollmann MD PhD is Professor and Director of the Institute for Medical Ethics and History of Medicine and Chair of the Centre for Medical Ethics Ruhr-University Bochum Germany. He completed a clinical training in psychiatry and psychotherapy at the University Hospitals in GieÃen Munich and Freiburg and wrote his habilitation thesis on ethical problems of informed consent in psychiatry at the Free University of Berlin. Prof. Vollmann was Visiting Fellow at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics Georgetown University Washington DC (1994/1995) Visiting Professor at the University of California at San Francisco School of Medicine and at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine New York (1999/2000) at the Institute for the Medical Humanities UTMB (2001) and at the Centre for Values Ethics and the Law in Medicine at the University of Sydney (2004 2008 and 2009). He was honoured with the Prize for Brain Research in Geriatrics by the University of Witten/Herdecke in 1999 and with the Stehr-Boldt-Prize for Medical Ethics of the University of Zürich in 2001. Prof. Vollmann's research interests include informed consent and capacity assessment ethics and psychiatry end-of-life decision-making advance directives medical professionalism clinical ethics committees and clinical ethics consultation.