The medical profession and human rights : handbook for a changing agenda
著者
書誌事項
The medical profession and human rights : handbook for a changing agenda
Zed Books, 2001
- : pbk
大学図書館所蔵 件 / 全9件
-
該当する所蔵館はありません
- すべての絞り込み条件を解除する
注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
- 巻冊次
-
ISBN 9781856496117
内容説明
Medical ethics and human rights are issues which now command much more attention both within the medical profession and in society generally than they used to. One reason is that the contexts in which doctors and other health personnel interact with the state have become more numerous. Another is that we are more conscious of patient rights in a whole variety of institutional settings. This is why the British Medical Association decided to take a thorough new look at the complex interface between medical practitioners and possible abuses of human rights.
This major new BMA Report, the successor to Medicine Betrayed which looked more narrowly at torture and related practices, takes its examples from all over the world -- both the industrialised and the developing countries. It ranges widely across a great variety of issues, including ones which doctors in everyday practice are sooner or later likely to confront. It includes abuse of institutionalised patients, research involving humans, trade in organs, doctors and asylum seekers, prison doctors, forensic doctors, the rehabilitation of torture victims, and medical involvement in armed conflicts and weapons research.
Throughout this Report, in whose drafting a large number of experienced doctors and other professionals have played a part, is a constant concern with the practical ethical issues such situations and contexts pose for medical personnel and guidance as to how they might deal with them. The concluding Part examines practical steps to help ensure that doctors and other health personnel are aware of these issues and are supported in their efforts to adhere to the ever higher standards of human rights observance which the modern world expects.
目次
Foreword
Introduction: A Changing Agenda
1. Medical Ethics and Professional Standards
2. Ethics, Morals Rights and Needs
3. Why Abuse Occurs
4. Torture, Cruel and Degrading Treatment
5. Prison Doctors
6. The Forensic Doctor
7. Capital and Corporal Punishment
8. Trade in Organs
9. Research and Experimentation on Humans
10. Neutrality
11. Doctors and Weapons
12. The Abuse of Institutionalised Patients
13. Health as a Human Rights Objective
14. Human Rights of Vulnerable Women and Children
15. Doctors and Asylum Seekers
16. Rehabilitation
17. Truth or Justice
18. Teaching Ethics and Human Rights
19. The Role of Professional Associations
20. Recommendations
- 巻冊次
-
: pbk ISBN 9781856496124
内容説明
Medical ethics and human rights are issues which now command much more attention both within the medical profession and in society generally than they used to. One reason is that the contexts in which doctors and other health personnel interact with the state have become more numerous. Another is that we are more conscious of patient rights in a whole variety of institutional settings. This is why the British Medical Association decided to take a thorough new look at the complex interface between medical practitioners and possible abuses of human rights.
This major new BMA Report, the successor to Medicine Betrayed which looked more narrowly at torture and related practices, takes its examples from all over the world -- both the industrialised and the developing countries. It ranges widely across a great variety of issues, including ones which doctors in everyday practice are sooner or later likely to confront. It includes abuse of institutionalised patients, research involving humans, trade in organs, doctors and asylum seekers, prison doctors, forensic doctors, the rehabilitation of torture victims, and medical involvement in armed conflicts and weapons research.
Throughout this Report, in whose drafting a large number of experienced doctors and other professionals have played a part, is a constant concern with the practical ethical issues such situations and contexts pose for medical personnel and guidance as to how they might deal with them. The concluding Part examines practical steps to help ensure that doctors and other health personnel are aware of these issues and are supported in their efforts to adhere to the ever higher standards of human rights observance which the modern world expects.
目次
Foreword
Introduction: A Changing Agenda
1. Medical Ethics and Professional Standards
2. Ethics, Morals Rights and Needs
3. Why Abuse Occurs
4. Torture, Cruel and Degrading Treatment
5. Prison Doctors
6. The Forensic Doctor
7. Capital and Corporal Punishment
8. Trade in Organs
9. Research and Experimentation on Humans
10. Neutrality
11. Doctors and Weapons
12. The Abuse of Institutionalised Patients
13. Health as a Human Rights Objective
14. Human Rights of Vulnerable Women and Children
15. Doctors and Asylum Seekers
16. Rehabilitation
17. Truth or Justice
18. Teaching Ethics and Human Rights
19. The Role of Professional Associations
20. Recommendations
「Nielsen BookData」 より