
The New Medicine and the Old Ethics by Albert Jonsen
The history of medicine is a record of scientific discovery, clinical triumph, and personal sacrifice; it is also a record of obscurantism, dogmatism, and greed. In this humane book one of our leading medical ethicists addresses the conflict between altruism and self-interest, which he believes is built into the structure of medical care and woven into the very fabric of physicians’ lives. In the process, he reveals both the wisdom and the weaknesses of traditional ethics in an era of innovative—and controversial—health care. This new medicine, only now coming into being, is no longer patient based. Patients are, more than ever before, representatives of a class—individuals with AIDS, the elderly, the comatose, the indigent—and the approach to treatment is influenced by the population from which those patients come. In addition, Albert Jonsen points out, medicine has moved from being an institution in which the physician is the dominant actor, the patient-physician relation the dominant scenario, and diagnosis and therapy the dominant script, to an institution in which physicians, a multitude of other providers, and newly empowered patients share equal billing. Jonsen calls for a return to the methods and values of the humanities, which he calls “the hormones that course through the complex institution of medicine and that enable it to respond to the constantly changing scientific, social, and economic environment.” Medicine must call up its memories and reflect upon its values. Ranging through history from the mythical Asclepius to the latest recipient of a transplanted heart, Jonsen reformulates the old ethics in terms that bring justice, competence, and compassion to bear on contemporary biomedical dilemmas. This is clearly a book to be read not only by members of the healing and helping professions but by every thinking person.
Jonsen, Albert: - Albert R. Jonsen, PhD, a founder in the field of clinical ethics, professor emeritus at the University of Washington, and co-founder of the Bioethics Program at Sutter Health, developed the four-topic method to case analysis, providing a real-world approach to ethical dilemmas in clinical medicine. Mark Siegler, MD, MACP, is professor of Medicine and Surgery at the University of Chicago, and founding director of Chicago's MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics is a renowned expert on clinical medical ethics. William Winslade, PhD, JD, philosopher, attorney and psychoanalyst, is professor of Philosophy in Medicine at the University of Texas Medical Branch, and a nationally recognized bioethicist.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780674617261 |
| ISBN 10 | 0674617266 |
| Title | The New Medicine and the Old Ethics |
| Author | Albert Jonsen |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Paperback |
| Publisher | Harvard University Press |
| Year published | 1992-03-01 |
| Number of pages | 176 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |