The Nature of the Doctor-Patient Relationship Health Care Principles through the phenomenology of relationships with patients /
This book serves to unite biomedical principles, which have been criticized as a model for solving moral dilemmas by inserting them and understanding them through the perspective of the phenomenon of health care relationship.�Consequently, it attributes a possible unification of virtue-based and pri...
Main Author: | |
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Corporate Author: | |
Format: | Electronic |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Dordrecht :
Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer,
2013.
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Series: | SpringerBriefs in Ethics,
2 |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://ezaccess.library.uitm.edu.my/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-4939-9 |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction
- CHAPTER 1 Critical overview of principlist theories
- 1.1 The Four-Principles Approach
- 1.1.1 Theoretical basis
- 1.1.2 The Paradigm case
- 1.1.3 The doctor-patient relationship
- 1.2� Robert Veatchs model of Lexical Ordering
- 1.3 The Principle of Permission
- CHAPTER 2 Phenomenological roots of Principles
- 2.1� The nature of the physician-patient relationship
- 2.1.1 Communication
- 2.1.2 Goals of Medicine
- 2.1.3� The care in Health Care
- 2.1.4� The special bond
- 2.2� The Principle of Beneficence and virtue
- 2.3� Nonmaleficence
- 2.3.1� Patient authority or trust
- 2.3.2� Epistemology
- 2.4� Respect for Autonomy
- 2.4.1� A historical and epistemological perspective
- 2.4.2� A cultural appraisal
- 2.5� The dual nature of Justice
- 2.5.1� The Justice of society
- 2.5.2� Justice in Health-Care
- CHAPTER 3 Principles as a consequence of the relationship
- 3.1� Need for grounding principles in
- the relationship
- 3.2� Defining the ontological entities
- 3.3 The physician as an entity
- 3.3.1� Levelling-down of medical relationships
- 3.3.2� Being as Understanding
- 3.4� The Patient as entity - potential for being truly-autonomous
- 3.4.1� Dimensions of the illness experience
- 3.4.2� True Autonomy and the Authenticity of the relationship
- 3.5 Hermeneutics of the relationship
- 3.6� Phenomenology of the clinical encounter
- CHAPTER 4 The principle of Justice in a secular society
- 4.1 Being-with-one-another and the Golden Rule
- 4.1.1 Being-with-one-another
- 4.1.2� The Golden Rule
- 4.2� Common Values
- 4.2.1� Implications in Bioethics
- 4.2.2 The naturalistic fallacy
- 4.3� Common morality and Being-with-one-another
- 4.3.1 Confronting rival traditions
- 4.3.2 Being-with-one-another
- CHAPTER 5 The question of social construct theories Reappraising and phenomenology of the doctor-patient relationship.-��� 5.1 Post-modernism and medicine
- 5.2 Socially constructed theories
- 5.3 A philosophy based on the phenomenology of the relationship
- 5.4 The ontology of the patient, the doctor and the relationship
- 5.5 Truth concealed
- 5.6 The Clinical Encounter
- CHAPTER 6.-� Conclusion
- BIBLIOGRAPHY.�������������.