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What Price Better Health?
A01=Daniel Callahan
american medicine
american society
annual budgets
Author_Daniel Callahan
bioethics
boundaries of science
capitalist society
Category=MBDC
Category=MBGR
Category=MBN
controversial
drug companies
economic needs
eq_isMigrated=1
health care costs
health care system
health researchers
human cloning
human subjects
limits of research
medical burdens
medical progress
medical research
medical testing
moral issues
morality
political history
profit motives
research imperative
social needs
sociology
stem cell research
Product details
- ISBN 9780520246645
- Weight: 454g
- Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
- Publication Date: 05 Jan 2006
- Publisher: University of California Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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The idea that we have an unlimited moral imperative to pursue medical research is deeply rooted in American society and medicine. In this provocative work, Daniel Callahan exposes the ways in which such a seemingly high and humane ideal can be corrupted and distorted into a harmful practice. Medical research, with its power to attract money and political support, and its promise of cures for a wide range of medical burdens, has good and bad sides - which are often indistinguishable. In "What Price Better Health?", Callahan teases out the distinctions and differences, revealing the difficulties that result when the research imperative is suffused with excessive zeal, adulterated by the profit motive, or used to justify cutting moral corners. Exploring the National Institutes of Health's annual budget, the inflated estimates of health care cost savings that result from research, the high prices charged by drug companies, the use and misuse of human subjects for medical testing, and the controversies surrounding human cloning and stem cell research, Callahan clarifies the fine line between doing good and doing harm in the name of medical progress.
His work shows that medical research must be understood in light of other social and economic needs and how even the research imperative, dedicated to the highest human good, has its limits.
Daniel Callahan is Director of the International Program at the Hastings Center and Senior Fellow at Harvard Medical School. He is the author of False Hopes (1998), The Troubled Dream of Life (1993), What Kind of Life? (1990), and Setting Limits (1987). In 2011, Callahan received the Matteo Ricci, S.J. Award for his contributions to Christian culture.
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