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1.
Christ Bioeth ; 28(1): 58-75, 2022 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35432574

ABSTRACT

Early in the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, concern that there could be a shortage of ventilators raised the possibility of rationing care. Denying patients life-saving care captures our moral imagination, prompting the demand for a defensible framework of ethical principles for determining who will live and who will die. Behind the moral dilemma posed by the shortage of a particular medical good lies a broad moral geography encompassing important and often unarticulated societal values, as well as assumptions about the nature and purpose of health care and the consequences of long-standing choices about health care as a social good. This article explores what COVID-19 has exposed concerning values and choices around health care in the United States. Employing the lens of Catholic Social Thought, it argues for an approach to rationing that is grounded in respect for human dignity, committed to distributing social goods in light of the common good, and self-conscious about the construction of vulnerability to illness and death.

2.
J Med Philos ; 41(6): 642-658, 2016 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27659583

ABSTRACT

Jeffrey Bishop's The Anticipatory Corpse exposes a functional metaphysics at the root of contemporary medical practice that gives rise to inhumane medicine, especially at the end of life. His critique of medicine argues for alternative spaces and practices in which the communal significance of the body, its telos, can be restored and the meaning of a "good death" enriched. This essay develops an alternative epistemology of the body, drawing from Christian theological accounts of the communal or Eucharistic body and linking liturgical practices to the cultivation of solidarity. It argues for an epistemology of the body that makes visible the invisible bodies at medicine's margins and illumines the disparate worlds of health care globally.


Subject(s)
Death , Philosophy, Medical , Religion and Medicine , Terminal Care/ethics , Bioethical Issues , Christianity , Human Body , Humans , Intensive Care Units , Metaphysics , Politics , Terminal Care/economics
3.
Environ Health Perspect ; 114(10): 1613-6, 2006 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17035152

ABSTRACT

A human rights paradigm for environmental health research makes explicit the relationship between poor health and poverty, inequality, and social and political marginalization, and it aims at civic problem solving. In so doing, it incorporates support for community-based, participatory research and takes seriously the social responsibilities of researchers. For these reasons, a human rights approach may be better able than conventional bioethics to address the unique issues that arise in the context of pediatric environmental health research, particularly the place of environmental justice standards in research. At the same time, as illustrated by disagreements over the ethics of research into lead abatement methods, bringing a human rights paradigm to bear in the context of environmental health research requires resolving important tensions at its heart, particularly the inescapable tension between ethical ideals and political realities.


Subject(s)
Child Welfare , Environmental Health , Human Rights , Child , Ethics, Research , Humans
4.
Theol Stud ; 65(1): 158-77, 2004 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15515232

ABSTRACT

Like theology and ethics generally, bioethics has increasingly developed a global consciousness. Controversies over AIDS research and access to affordable AIDS treatment have generated new awareness about the importance of international collaboration as well as the difficulty of achieving moral consensus across economic, political, and cultural divides. Advances in scientific and medical knowledge through initiatives such as the Human Genome Project invite new questions about the nature of health care as a common good. This budding global consciousness serves as a starting point for examining contemporary challenges to the secular, principle-based Western bioethics that has dominated national and international debate for three decades.


Subject(s)
Bioethical Issues , Bioethics , Developing Countries , Global Health , International Cooperation , Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome/prevention & control , Biotechnology/ethics , Christianity , Cross-Cultural Comparison , Delivery of Health Care/economics , Health Services Accessibility/ethics , Human Experimentation/ethics , Human Genome Project/ethics , Humans , Pharmaceutical Preparations/economics , Principle-Based Ethics , Social Justice , Social Values , Western World
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