Standard of Care: The Law of American Bioethics

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 1997 - Law - 291 pages
American law, not philosophy or medicine, is the major force shaping American bioethics. This is both because law at its best fosters individual rights, equality, and justice, and because violation of the legal duty or "standard of care" a physician owes a patient can lead to a malpractice suit. The law has therefore had two conflicting impacts on medical ethics: the positive effect of eroding paternalism and replacing it with a patient-centered ethic; and the negative effect of encouraging physicians to be more concerned with avoiding litigation than doing the "right" thing.

Standard of Care explores the fundamental value conflicts confronting medicine and society by examining courtroom resolutions of real bioethical disputes, often of constitutional dimension. This case-based approach, which ranges from abortion to euthanasia, from AIDS to organ transplantation, from genetic research to the artificial heart and rationing, illuminates the value choices with which the power (and impotence) of medicine confronts us. George Annas urges health care professionals to go beyond the minimalist legal "standard of care" by promoting a vigorous, patient-centered medical ethics based on respect for human rights and responsibility to both patients and society. If modern medicine is to enhance human life, a reconceptualization of law as the beginning of ethical discourse, rather than as an instrument to end it, is essential. Such a discourse could enrich all our lives by helping us to articulate both a national and international agenda for human rights in health.

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Contents

Introduction
3
Public Sector Bioethics
11
Restricting DoctorPatient Conversations
15
The War on Drugs and Prisoners
22
The Tragedy of Angela Carder
35
The Supreme Court Privacy and Abortion
47
The Short Happy Life of Commercial Surrogacy
61
A French Homunculus in a Tennessee Court
71
Selling Other Peoples Cells
167
The Politics of Fetal Tissue Transplants
181
Death and Organ Donation
187
Consent to the Artificial Heart
198
Rationing Medical Care
211
Minerva v National Health Agency 53 U S 2d 333 2020
218
Killing One to Save the Other
234
Killing Machines
240

The Supreme Court
85
In the Laboratory
98
Legal Duties of Physicians in
119
Mapping the Human Genome and the Meaning
145
Concluding Thoughts and a Proposal
246
Notes
259
Index
279
Copyright

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About the author (1997)

George Annas, J.D., M.P.H., is the Edward R. Utley Professor of Health Law, and Director of the Law, Medicine and Ethics Program, Boston University Schools of Medicine, Public Health, and Law. He wrote a regular feature on health law and bioethics for The Hastings Center Report from 1976 to 1991, and since then has written regularly on "Legal Issues in Medicine" for the New England Journal of Medicine.

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