Reproductive Ethics in Clinical Practice
Preventing, Initiating, and Managing Pregnancy and Delivery--Essays Inspired by the MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics Lecture Series
Herausgeber: Chor, Julie; Watson, Katie
Reproductive Ethics in Clinical Practice
Preventing, Initiating, and Managing Pregnancy and Delivery--Essays Inspired by the MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics Lecture Series
Herausgeber: Chor, Julie; Watson, Katie
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This volume collects essays by the United States' leading authorities on reproductive ethics (lawyers, doctors, and social scientists), offering clinicians, students, and lay readers guidance on a broad range of cutting-edge issues, such as reproductive justice, religion in reproductive health care, abortion, assisted reproduction, and fetal surgery--all framed by the co-editors' overviews and study questions.
- Jan BosteelsStudies on the effectiveness of endoscopic surgery in reproductive medicine41,99 €
- Mimi Amaral Psy D.Alternative Conception: From Infertility to delivery19,99 €
- Haemorrhage and Thrombosis for the Mrcog and Beyond49,99 €
- James R HardenEthical Theory and Pertinent Standards in Women's Reproductive Health13,99 €
- American College of Obstetricians and GyProlog: Obstetrics, Eighth Edition (Assessment & Critique)193,99 €
- Gynaecological Oncology for the Mrcog and Beyond59,99 €
- Obstetricians and America GynecologistsDennen's Forceps Deliveries, Fourth Edition37,99 €
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Sydney University Press
- Seitenzahl: 284
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 157mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 431g
- ISBN-13: 9780190873011
- ISBN-10: 0190873019
- Artikelnr.: 62079785
- Verlag: Sydney University Press
- Seitenzahl: 284
- Erscheinungstermin: 20. Juli 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 157mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 431g
- ISBN-13: 9780190873011
- ISBN-10: 0190873019
- Artikelnr.: 62079785
MD
MPH and Katie Watson
JD * I. Family Planning and Abortion: Preventing Pregnancy and Birth * Chapter 2. Orienting Essay: Julie Chor
MD
MPH and Katie Watson
JD * Chapter 3. Why Reproductive Justice Matters to Reproductive Ethics
Melissa Gilliam MD MPH and Dorothy Roberts JD * Chapter 4. Religiously Affiliated Healthcare Institutions: An Ethical Analysis of What They Mean for Patients
Clinicians
and Our Health System
Lori Freedman PhD and Debra Stulberg MD
MA * Chapter 5. Contemporary Challenges to Providing Confidential Reproductive Health Care to Minors
Amber Truehart
MD
MSc
Lee Hasselbacher
JD
Julie Chor
MD
MPH * Chapter 6. Legal History of Contraception and Abortion in the United States
David Strauss JD
* II. Assisted Reproduction: Getting Pregnant * Chapter 7. Orienting Essay: Julie Chor
MD
MPH and Katie Watson
JD * Chapter 8. Ethics and Stratified (Assisted) Reproduction
Lisa Harris MD PhD * Chapter 9. Preimplantation Genetics: Liabilities and Limitations
Valerie Koch JD * Chapter 10. Who are Your Patients
and What Happens when They Disagree? Conflicts in Treating Multiple Parties Engaging In Third Party Reproduction
Heather Ross JD * Chapter 11. Controversial Issues Surrounding Oocyte Donation
Susan Klock PhD * Chapter 12. Onco-Fertility: Ethics and Hope After Cancer
Bruno Ramalho de Carvalho
MD
MSc
MBA
Jhenifer Kliemchen Rodrigues
BSc
MSc
PhD
and Teresa K. Woodruff
MD
PhD. * Chapter 13. Accessing Reproductive Technology in France: Strengths and Limits of a model that privileges "Just reproduction" above Respect for autonomy
Laurence Brunet et Véronique Fournier * III. Obstetric Ethics: Managing Pregnancy and Delivery * Chapter 14. Orienting Essay: Julie Chor
MD
MPH and Katie Watson
JD * Chapter 15. The fallacy of forced treatment: Reconciling the law and ethics of post-viability treatment refusals and post-viability abortion prohibitions
Katie Watson
JD * Chapter 16. Professional Ethics in Obstetrics Practice and Research
Frank A. Chervenak
MD and Laurence McCullough PhD * Chapter 17. Doing Harm: When Health Care Providers Report their Pregnant Patients to the Police and Other Authorities
Jeanne Flavin
PhD and Lynn M. Paltrow
J.D * Chapter 18. Prenatal counseling for maternal-fetal surgery: Potential biases
competing interests
and undue practice variation in the world of Fetal Care
Stephen D. Brown
MD * Chapter 19. Ethical Issues in Academic Global Reproductive Health
Kayte Spector-Bagdady JD MBE and Timothy R. B. Johnson MD
MD
MPH and Katie Watson
JD * I. Family Planning and Abortion: Preventing Pregnancy and Birth * Chapter 2. Orienting Essay: Julie Chor
MD
MPH and Katie Watson
JD * Chapter 3. Why Reproductive Justice Matters to Reproductive Ethics
Melissa Gilliam MD MPH and Dorothy Roberts JD * Chapter 4. Religiously Affiliated Healthcare Institutions: An Ethical Analysis of What They Mean for Patients
Clinicians
and Our Health System
Lori Freedman PhD and Debra Stulberg MD
MA * Chapter 5. Contemporary Challenges to Providing Confidential Reproductive Health Care to Minors
Amber Truehart
MD
MSc
Lee Hasselbacher
JD
Julie Chor
MD
MPH * Chapter 6. Legal History of Contraception and Abortion in the United States
David Strauss JD
* II. Assisted Reproduction: Getting Pregnant * Chapter 7. Orienting Essay: Julie Chor
MD
MPH and Katie Watson
JD * Chapter 8. Ethics and Stratified (Assisted) Reproduction
Lisa Harris MD PhD * Chapter 9. Preimplantation Genetics: Liabilities and Limitations
Valerie Koch JD * Chapter 10. Who are Your Patients
and What Happens when They Disagree? Conflicts in Treating Multiple Parties Engaging In Third Party Reproduction
Heather Ross JD * Chapter 11. Controversial Issues Surrounding Oocyte Donation
Susan Klock PhD * Chapter 12. Onco-Fertility: Ethics and Hope After Cancer
Bruno Ramalho de Carvalho
MD
MSc
MBA
Jhenifer Kliemchen Rodrigues
BSc
MSc
PhD
and Teresa K. Woodruff
MD
PhD. * Chapter 13. Accessing Reproductive Technology in France: Strengths and Limits of a model that privileges "Just reproduction" above Respect for autonomy
Laurence Brunet et Véronique Fournier * III. Obstetric Ethics: Managing Pregnancy and Delivery * Chapter 14. Orienting Essay: Julie Chor
MD
MPH and Katie Watson
JD * Chapter 15. The fallacy of forced treatment: Reconciling the law and ethics of post-viability treatment refusals and post-viability abortion prohibitions
Katie Watson
JD * Chapter 16. Professional Ethics in Obstetrics Practice and Research
Frank A. Chervenak
MD and Laurence McCullough PhD * Chapter 17. Doing Harm: When Health Care Providers Report their Pregnant Patients to the Police and Other Authorities
Jeanne Flavin
PhD and Lynn M. Paltrow
J.D * Chapter 18. Prenatal counseling for maternal-fetal surgery: Potential biases
competing interests
and undue practice variation in the world of Fetal Care
Stephen D. Brown
MD * Chapter 19. Ethical Issues in Academic Global Reproductive Health
Kayte Spector-Bagdady JD MBE and Timothy R. B. Johnson MD