Ethics: Contemporary challenges in health and social care
Ethics: Contemporary challenges in health and social care
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Abstract
While ethics has been addressed in the health care literature, relatively little attention has been paid to the subject in the field of social care. This book redresses the balance by examining theory, research, policy, and practice in both fields. The analysis is set within the context of contemporary challenges facing health and social care, not only in Britain but internationally. Contributors from the United Kingdom, United States, and Australia consider ethical issues in health and social care research and governance; inter-professional and user perspectives; ethics in relation to human rights, the law, finance, management, and provision; key issues of relevance to vulnerable groups such as children and young people; those with complex disabilities, older people, and those with mental health problems; and lifecourse issues – ethical perspectives on a range of challenging areas from new technologies of reproduction to euthanasia.
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Front Matter
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One
Introduction
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Section 1 Ethics: Research and provision in health and social care
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Two
Ethics and contemporary challenges in health and social care
Louise Terry
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Three
Ethical issues in health and social care research
Robert Stanley andSusan McLaren
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Four
Ethics: research governance for health and social care
Elaine Pierce
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Five
Ethics and primary health care
Charles Campion-Smith
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Six
Ethics and social care: political, organisational and interagency dimensions
Colin Whittington andMargaret Whittington
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Seven
Ethics and interprofessional care
Audrey Leathard
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Eight
Service users and ethics
Martin Stevens andJill Manthorpe
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Two
Ethics and contemporary challenges in health and social care
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Section 2 Law, management and ethics in health and social care
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Nine
Ethical and legal perspectives on human rights
Louise Terry
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Ten
Multidisciplinary team practice in law and ethics: an Australian perspective
Robert Irvine andJohn McPhee
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Eleven
Ethics and the management of health and social care
Jeff Girling
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Twelve
Ethics and the social responsibility of institutions regarding resource allocation in health and social care: a US perspective
Mary Dombeck andTobie Hittle Olsan
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Thirteen
Ethics and charging for care
Bridget Penhale
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Nine
Ethical and legal perspectives on human rights
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Section 3 Ethics: From the start of life to the end
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Fourteen
Ethical challenges and the new technologies of reproduction
Brenda Almond
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Fifteen
Ethics: caring for children and young people
David Hodgson
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Sixteen
Ethical dilemmas in caring for people with complex disabilities
Keith Andrews
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Seventeen
Mental health: safe, sound and supportive?1
Jon Glasby and others
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Eighteen
Ethics and older people
Anthea Tinker
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Nineteen
Ethics and euthanasia
Clive Seale
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Twenty
Conclusion
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Fourteen
Ethical challenges and the new technologies of reproduction
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End Matter
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