•  18
  •  13
    Silence: The Phenomenon and its Ontological Significance, by Bernard P. Dauenhauer
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 16 (1): 105-105. 1985.
  •  56
    Frank Koughan and Walt Bogdanich's response to my article, reminds me of the Shakespearean line, My article was not about the specifics of the 60Minutes April 13, 1997, story on NHBD at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation (CCF), even though the story formed the basis for the reflection. I did not attack the critics, though I do believe that bioethicists are accountable for their scholarly and public pronouncements. Although I do not see why the 60Minutes' story should be treated with deference, my a…Read more
  •  11
    Truth and Communication in Ethics Consultation
    American Journal of Bioethics 21 (5): 31-33. 2021.
    In “Deception and the Clinical Ethicist,” Christopher Meyers defends that view that deception practiced by clinical ethicists is legitimate if it satisfies a series of justifying conditions (Meyers...
  •  74
    Reflections on the function of dignity in the context of caring for old people
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (5). 2007.
    This article accepts the proposition that old people want to be treated with dignity and that statements about dignity point to ethical duties that, if not independent of rights, at least enhance rights in ethically important ways. In contexts of policy and law, dignity can certainly have a substantive as well as rhetorical function. However, the article questions whether the concept of dignity can provide practical guidance for choosing among alternative approaches to the care of old people. Th…Read more
  •  1
    The Development and Rationale for CECA’s Case-Based Study Guide
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 29 (2): 158-161. 2018.
    This article discusses the approach of the Clinical Ethics Consultation Advisory Committee (CECA) in developing A Case-Based Study Guide for Addressing Patient-Centered Ethical Issues in Health Care. This article addresses the processes used by the CECA, its use of pivot questions intended to encourage critical reflection, and the target audience of this work. It first considers the salience of case studies in general education and their relevance for training ethics consultants. Second, it disc…Read more
  •  22
    Organization Ethics in Health Care
    with Edward M. Spencer, Ann E. Mills, Mary V. Rorty, and Patricia H. Werhane
    Hastings Center Report 30 (6): 46. 2000.
  •  39
    Central to much medical ethical analysis is the concept of the role of the physician. While this concept plays an important role in medical ethics, its function is largely tacit. The present paper attempts to bring the concept of a social role to prominence by focusing on an historically recent and rather richly contextured role, namely, that of consultation liaison psychiatry. Since my intention is primarily theoretical, I largely ignore the empirical studies which purport to develop the detail…Read more
  •  57
    Reassessing Autonomy in Long‐Term Care
    Hastings Center Report 20 (6): 12-17. 1990.
    The realities of long‐term care call for a refurbished, concrete concept of autonomy that systematically attends to the history and development of persons and takes account of the experiences of daily living.
  •  38
    Rationing and Professional Autonomy
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 18 (1-2): 77-84. 1990.
  •  29
    Rationing and Professional Autonomy
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 18 (1-2): 77-84. 1990.
  •  4
    On Dreaming: An Ecounter with Medard Boss
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 15 (2): 213-213. 1984.
  •  19
    Volume 19, Issue 6, June 2019, Page 1-3.
  •  18
    Organizing Ethics (review)
    Hastings Center Report 30 (6): 46. 2000.
  •  5
    Method in ethics consultation has at least three distinguishable components: a canon – that is, the rules that guide actions, cognitions, judgments, and perceptions involved in performing an ethics consultation; a discipline – that is, a mastery, or at least possession, of the specific types of actions and intentions of ethics consultation which are guided by the rules that are embodied in the actions of competent ethics consultants; and a history – that is, the narrative of, and critical reflec…Read more
  •  72
    For Experts Only? Access to Hospital Ethics Committees
    Hastings Center Report 21 (5): 17-24. 1991.
    How closely involved with hospital ethics committees should patients and their families become? Should they routinely have access to committees, or be empowered to initiate consultations? To what extent should they be informed of the content or outcome of committee deliberations? Seeing ethics committees as the locus of competing responsibilities allows us to respond to the questions posed by a patient rights model and to acknowledge more fully the complex moral dynamics of clinical medicine.
  •  57
    Ethics Expert Testimony: Against the Skeptics
    with B. J. Spielman
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 22 (4): 381-403. 1997.
    There is great skepticism about the admittance of expert normative ethics testimony into evidence. However, a practical analysis of the way ethics testimony has been used in courts of law reveals that the skeptical position is itself based on assumptions that are controversial. We argue for an alternative way to understand such expert testimony. This alternative understanding is based on the practice of clinical ethics
  •  31
    Facing the ethical questions in facial transplantation
    with Maria Siemionow
    American Journal of Bioethics 4 (3). 2004.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  38
    Incentives and obligations under prospective payment
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 12 (2): 123-144. 1987.
    In this paper I analyze the alleged conflict between economic incentives to efficiently utilize health care resources and the obligation to provide patients with the best possible medical care. My analysis is developed in four stages. First, I discuss briefly the nature of prospective payment systems and economic incentives as well as the issue of professional autonomy. Second, I disscuss the notion of an incentive for action both as an economic incentive and as a concept of moral psychology. Th…Read more
  •  25
    Ethics Consultation: Critical Distance/Clinical Competence
    American Journal of Bioethics 18 (6): 45-47. 2018.
  •  61
    Defense Mechanisms in Ethics Consultation
    HEC Forum 23 (4): 269-279. 2011.
    While there is no denying the relevance of ethical knowledge and analytical and cognitive skills in ethics consultation, such knowledge and skills can be overemphasized. They can be effectively put into practice only by an ethics consultant, who has a broad range of other skills, including interpretive and communicative capacities as well as the capacity effectively to address the psychosocial needs of patients, family members, and healthcare professionals in the context of an ethics consultatio…Read more
  •  37
    Ethics and innovation in medicine
    Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (5): 295-296. 2001.
    How should one think about innovation in medicine and surgery? Increasingly, the answer to this question has involved reference to what might be called the regulatory ethics paradigm (REP). The regulatory ethics paradigm holds that deviations from standard care involve a degree or kind of experimentation that requires the application of a set of procedures designed to assure the protection of the rights and welfare of the subjects of research. In REP, innovative treatments are regarded as questi…Read more
  •  52
    Authority in Ethics Consultation
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 23 (3): 273-283. 1995.
    Authority is an uneasy, political notion. Heard with modern ears, it calls forth images of oppression and power. In institutional settings, authority is everywhere present, and its use poses problems for the exercise both of individual autonomy and of responsibility. In medical ethics, the exercise of authority has been located on the side of the physician or the health care institution, and it has usually been opposed by appeal to patient autonomy and rights. So, it is not surprising, though st…Read more