Neonatal BioethicsNeonatal Bioethics
the Moral Challenges of Medical Innovation
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Book, 2006
Current format, Book, 2006, , All copies in use.Book, 2006
Current format, Book, 2006, , All copies in use. Offered in 0 more formatsNeonatal intensive care has been one of the most morally controversial areas of medicine during the last thirty years. This study examines the interconnected development of four key aspects of neonatal intensive care: medical advances, ethical analysis, legal scrutiny, and econometric evaluation. The authors hypothesize that a dramatic shift in societal attitudes toward newborns and their medical care was both a stimulus for and then a result of developments in the medical care of newborns. They divide their analysis into three historical eras of neonatal intensive care. The first, characterized by the rapid advance of medical technology from the late 1960s to the Baby Doe case of 1982, established neonatal care as a legitimate specialty of medical care, separate and distinct from the rest of pediatrics and medicine. During this era, legal scholars and moral philosophers debated the relative importance of parental autonomy, clinical prognosis, and children's rights. legislation mandating the treatment of infants with debilitating birth defects unless the attending physician deems efforts to prolong life futile), stimulated efforts to establish a consistent federal standard on neonatal care decisions and raised important moral questions concerning the meaning of futility and inhumane treatment. In the third era, a consistent set of decision-making criteria and policies was established. These policies were the result of synergy and harmonization of newly agreed upon ethical principles and newly discovered epidemiological characteristics of neonatal care. Tracing the field's recent history, notable advances, and considerable challenges to be faced, the authors present neonatal bioethics as a paradigm of complex societal conversation among physicians, philosophers, policymakers, judges, and legislators that led to responsible societal oversight of a controversial medical innovation.
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- Baltimore : Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006
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