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77The Costs of Caring: Who Pays? Who Profits? Who Panders?Hastings Center Report 36 (3): 13-17. 2006.
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172Just Caring: In Defense of Limited Age-Based Healthcare RationingCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 19 (1): 27. 2010.The debate around age-based healthcare rationing was precipitated by two books in the late 1980s, one by Daniel Callahan and the other by Norman Daniels. These books ignited a firestorm of criticism, best captured in the claim that any form of age-based healthcare rationing was fundamentally ageist, discriminatory in a morally objectionable sense. That is, the elderly had equal moral worth and an equal right to life as the nonelderly. If an elderly and nonelderly person each had essentially the …Read more
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64Four Volumes in Health Care Ethics (review)Teaching Philosophy 36 (1): 59-70. 2013.This review discusses four recently published textbooks in health care ethics. The theme I emphasize here is that the more common health care ethics issues addressed in these texts are of enormous personal, political and professional relevance today. More specifically, these issues have been enormously socially divisive, as the rhetoric about “death panels” illustrates. A course in health care ethics ought to provide students (future citizens in a liberal, pluralistic, democratic society) with t…Read more
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80Civil Disobedience and Moral Law in Nineteenth-Century American Philosophy. By Edward H. Madden (review)Modern Schoolman 46 (4): 367-368. 1969.
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80It’s not fair! Or is it? The promise and the tyranny of evidence-based performance assessmentTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics 33 (4): 293-311. 2012.Evidence-based medicine (EBM), by its ability to decrease irrational variations in health care, was expected to improve healthcare quality and outcomes. The utility of EBM principles evolved from individual clinical decision-making to wider foundational clinical practice guideline applications, cost containment measures, and clinical quality performance measures. At this evolutionary juncture one can ask the following questions. Given the time-limited exigencies of daily clinical practice, is it…Read more
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62MiscellaneousHastings Center Report 32 (2): 35-36. 2012.It's not only necessary, but possible, if the public can be educated.
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74Just health care : Is equality too much?Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 10 (4). 1989.In a previous essay I criticized Engelhardt's libertarian conception of justice, which grounds the view that society's obligation to assure access to adequate health care for all is a matter of beneficence [1].Beneficence fails to capture the moral stringency associated with many claims for access to health care. In the present paper I argue that these claims are really matters of justice proper, where justice is conceived along moderate egalitarian lines, such as those suggested by Rawls and Da…Read more
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29Just Caring: Do Future Possible Children Have a Just Claim to a Sufficiently Healthy Genome?In Rosamond Rhodes, Margaret P. Battin & Anita Silvers (eds.), Medicine and Social Justice: Essays on the Distribution of Health Care, Oup Usa. pp. 446. 2002.
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120Deliberative democracy for bioethics: could the web help?Hastings Center Report 31 (4): 7. 2001.
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21The Great Awakening: How to Accomplish the Reform That Justice RequiresHastings Center Report 38 (2): 4-4. 2008.
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48MiscellaneousHastings Center Report 32 (2): 35-36. 2002.It's not only necessary, but possible, if the public can be educated.
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178Just caring: Oregon, health care rationing, and informed democratic deliberationJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 19 (4): 367-388. 1994.This essay argues that our national efforts at health reform ought to be informed by eleven key lessons from Oregon. Specifically, we must learn that the need for health care rationing is inescapable, that any rationing process must be public and visible, and that fair rationing protocols must be self-imposed through a process of rational democratic deliberation. Part I of this essay notes that rationing is a ubiquitous feature of our health care system at present, but it is mostly hidden ration…Read more
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121Healthcare justice and rational democratic deliberationAmerican Journal of Bioethics 1 (2). 2001.This Article does not have an abstract
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75The Price of Compromise: The Massachusetts Health Care ReformHastings Center Report 37 (1): 4. 2007.
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118Medical Ethics Resource Network of Michigan: Development of a statewide Ethics NetworkCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 1 (3): 271. 1992.
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42JUST Rationing or just Rationing? THE Challenge of Health ReformJurisprudence 6 (1): 131-137. 2015.
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130Just caring: Health reform and health care rationingJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 19 (5): 435-443. 1994.Health reform must include health care rationing, both for reasons of fairness and efficiency. Few politicians are willing to accept this claim, including the Clinton Administration. Brown and others have argued that enormous waste and inefficiency must be wrung out of our health care system before morally problematic cost constraining options, such as rationing, can be justifiably adopted. However, I argue that most of the policies and practices that would diminish waste and inefficiency includ…Read more
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120DRGs: Justice and the invisible rationing of health care resourcesJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 12 (2): 165-196. 1987.Are DRGs just? This is the primary question which this essay will answer. But there is a prior methodological question that also needs to be addressed: How do we go about rationally (non-arbitrarily) assessing whether DRGs are just or not? I would suggest that grand, ideal theories of justice (Rawls, Nozick) have only very limited utility for answering this question. What we really need is a theory of “interstitial justice,” that is, an approach to making justice judgments that is suitable to as…Read more
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1758On being genetically "irresponsible"Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 10 (2): 129-146. 2000.: New genetic technologies continue to emerge that allow us to control the genetic endowment of future children. Increasingly the claim is made that it is morally "irresponsible" for parents to fail to use such technologies when they know their possible children are at risk for a serious genetic disorder. We believe such charges are often unwarranted. Our goal in this article is to offer a careful conceptual analysis of the language of irresponsibility in an effort to encourage more care in its …Read more
East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |