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72Friedman Howard Steven. Ultimate Price: The Value We Place on LifePublic Health Ethics 14 (2): 218-220. 2021.
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52Some Lives Matter: The Dirty Little Secret of the U.S. Health Care SystemHastings Center Report 50 (5): 3-4. 2020.Our health care system in the United States reflects the inequities that are part of the larger society, which is why our system for financing access to needed and effective health care is so complicated and unfair.
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45Commentary: Medical Ethics: A Distinctive Species of EthicsCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 29 (3): 421-425. 2020.
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78Just caring: screening needs limitsJournal of Medical Ethics 46 (4): 253-254. 2020.This personal narrative tugs at the heart strings. However, personal narratives are not sufficient to justify public funding for any screening policy. We have to take seriously the ‘just caring’ problem. We have only limited resources to meet virtually unlimited health care needs. No doubt, screening tests often save lives. The author wants public funding for prostate-specific antigen screening for prostate cancer. However, why only prostate cancer? Numerous cancers at various stages can be scre…Read more
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56Precision QALYs, Precisely UnjustCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 28 (3): 439-449. 2019.Warwick Heale has recently defended the notion of individualized and personalized Quality-Adjusted Life Years in connection with health care resource allocation decisions. Ordinarily, QALYs are used to make allocation decisions at the population level. If a health care intervention costs £100,000 and generally yields only two years of survival, the cost per QALY gained will be £50,000, far in excess of the £30,000 limit per QALY judged an acceptable use of resources within the National Health Se…Read more
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58First Come, First Served in the Intensive Care Unit: Always?Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 27 (1): 52-61. 2018.Abstract:Because the demand for intensive care unit (ICU) beds exceeds the supply in general, and because of the formidable costs of that level of care, clinicians face ethical issues when rationing this kind of care not only at the point of admission to the ICU, but also after the fact. Under what conditions—if any—may patients be denied admission to the ICU or removed after admission? One professional medical group has defended a rule of “first come, first served” in ICU admissions, and this a…Read more
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84Controlling Healthcare Costs: Just Cost Effectiveness or “Just” Cost Effectiveness?Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 27 (2): 271-283. 2018.
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59Choosing WiselyCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 25 (3): 366-376. 2016.Abstract:The American College of Physicians in its ethics manual endorsed the idea that physicians ought to improve their ability to provide care to their patients more parsimoniously. This elicited a critical backlash; critics essentially claimed that what was being endorsed was a renamed form of rationing. In a recent article, Tilburt and Cassel argued that parsimonious care and rationing are ethically distinct practices. In this essay I critically assess that claim. I argue that in practice t…Read more
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69Despairing about Health DisparitiesHastings Center Report 47 (5): 43-44. 2017.I have never doubted that the problem of inequalities in health status and access to needed care is a difficult ethical and political challenge. After reading the essays in Understanding Health Inequalities and Justice: New Conversations across the Disciplines, edited by Mara Buchbinder, Michele Rivkin-Fish, and Rebecca Walker, I concluded that despair was the only suitable response in the face of daunting ethical and political complexity. The editors of this volume have three questions in mind …Read more
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82Just Solidarity: The Key to Fair Health Care RationingDiametros 43 44-54. 2015.I agree with Professor ter Meulen that there is no need to make a forced choice between “justice” and “solidarity” when it comes to determining what should count as fair access to needed health care. But he also asserts that solidarity is more fundamental than justice. That claim needs critical assessment. Ter Meulen recognizes that the concept of solidarity has been criticized for being excessively vague. He addresses this criticism by introducing the more precise notion of “humanitarian solida…Read more
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117Just Caring: Health Care Rationing, Terminal Illness, and the Medically Least Well offJournal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 39 (2): 156-171. 2011.What does it mean to be a “just” and “caring” society in meeting the health care needs of the terminally ill when we have only limited resources to meet virtually unlimited health care needs? This is the question that will be the focus of this essay. Another way of asking our question would be the following: Relative to all the other health care needs in our society, especially the need for lifesaving or life-prolonging health care, how high a priority ought the health care needs of persons who …Read more
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66Critical Care Limits: What Is the Right Balance?American Journal of Bioethics 16 (1): 48-50. 2016.
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201Whoopie Pies, Supersized FriesCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 21 (1): 5-19. 2012.The annual cost of healthcare in the United States reached $2.5 trillion in 2009 (about 17.6% of GDP) with projections to 2019 of about $4.5 trillion (about 20% of likely GDP).
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204Personalized Medicine's Ragged EdgeHastings Center Report 40 (5): 16-18. 2012.The phrase "personalized medicine" has a built-in positive spin. Simple genetic tests can sometimes predict whether a particular individual will have a positive response to a particular drug or, alternatively, suffer costly and debilitating side effects. But little attention has been given to some challenging issues of justice raised by personalized medicine. How should we determine who would have a just claim to access particular treatments, especially very expensive ones? How effective do thos…Read more
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41Just health care : Is beneficence enough?Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 10 (2). 1989.Few in our society believe that access to health care should be determined primarily by ability to pay. We believe instead that society has an obligation to assure access to adequate health care for all. This is the view explicitly endorsed in the President's Commission Report Securing Access to Health Care. But there is an important moral ambiguity here, for this obligation may be construed as being either beneficence-based or justice -based. A beneficience-based construal would yield a much we…Read more
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145Just Caring: Defining a Basic Benefit PackageJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 36 (6): 589-611. 2011.What should be the content of a package of health care services that we would want to guarantee to all Americans? This question cannot be answered adequately apart from also addressing the issue of fair health care rationing. Consequently, as I argue in this essay, appeal to the language of "basic," "essential," "adequate," "minimally decent," or "medically necessary" for purposes of answering our question is unhelpful. All these notions are too vague to be useful. Cost matters. Effectiveness ma…Read more
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111Pricing Life: Why It's Time for Health Care Rationing, by Peter A. Ubel, M.D. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2000. 208 pp. $25.00 (review)Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 10 (2): 214-218. 2001.This is a book for reflective laypersons and health professionals who wish to better understand what the problem of healthcare rationing is all about. Ubel says clearly in the Introduction that it is unlikely that professional economists or philosophers are going to be very satisfied with this effort. For him it is more important (p. xix). This is a reasonable aim made achievable by Ubel's clear and engaging writing style. Probably the people who most need to be drawn into these debates are phys…Read more
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71Bette Anton, MLS, is Head Librarian of the Pamela and Kenneth Fong Optometry and Health Sciences Library. This library serves the University of California, Berkeley–University of California, San Francisco Joint Medical Pro-gram and the University of California, Berkeley School of OptometryCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 13 117-118. 2004.
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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.
East Lansing, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |