Aging, biotechnology, and the future
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Aging, biotechnology, and the future
Johns Hopkins University Press, 2008
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This wide-ranging, multidisciplinary collection examines how advances in medicine and technology are affecting the aging process and the lives of elderly persons. In analyzing the state of biotechnology, these essays applaud the positive-extended longevity and the potential for greater quality of life-while probing such ethical quandaries as presymptomatic genetic testing, therapeutic cloning, antiaging technologies, and the transhumanist movement. The volume includes discussions about the respective roles of health care professionals, government, and individuals in shaping a workable regulatory framework and unifying multiple perspectives to make the biotechnology revolution beneficial to all. Featuring contributions from renowned scholars of religion, ethics, philosophy, psychology, law, medicine and nursing, and gerontology, Aging, Biotechnology, and the Future illuminates the promises and perils of growing old in the biomedical age. Contributors: George J. Annas, Jessica Brommelhoff, Lisa Sowle Cahill, Margaret Gatz, Pamela J. Grace, Robert C. Green, Fernando A. Guerra, Rose M. Harvey, Kathy J. Horvath, Ann C.
Hurley, Robert Lanza, Karen Lebacqz, Erin Linnenbringer, Maxwell J. Mehlman, Toni P. Miles, Sarah Moses, Thomas T. Perls, Leonard W. Poon, Catherine Y. Read, J. Scott Roberts, Diane Scott-Jones, Thomas A. Shannon, Richard L. Sprott, Rosemarie Tong, Laurie Zoloth
Table of Contents
Preface
List of Contributors
Part I: Introduction
Chapter 1. Reality check: What Is Genetic Research on Aging Likely to Produce, and What Are the Ethical and Clinical Implications of Those Advances?
Chapter 2. Meeting the Challenges of a Diverse Aging Society
Part II: Immortality
Chapter 3. Immortality Through cloning? Reproduction, Regeneration, and the Posthuman
Chapter 4. The Transhumanist Movement: A Flawed Response to Aging and Its Natural Consequence
Chapter 5. Stem cell Research and Intervention
Chapter 6. The Ethical, Legal, and Social Implications of Antiaging Technologies
Chapter 7. Stem Cells and Aging: Quality and Quantity of Life in an Unjust World
Part III: Centenarians
Chapter 8. Centenarians and Genetics
Chapter 9. What Can We learn From Centenarians?
Chapter 10. A Developmental Perspective on Aging and Genetic Technology: A Response to Studies of Centenarians
Part IV: Genetic Testing
Chapter 11. Genetic Testing for Alzheimer Disease: The REVEAL Study
Chapter 12. The Implications of Genetic testing for Alzheimer Disease
Chapter 13. Genetic Susceptibility to Alzheimer Disease
Chapter 14. Psychological Issues in Genetic Testing
Chapter 15. Genotype, Phenotype, and Primary care: Why the New Genetics Technology Is Not Ready for Primary Care
Part V: Ethical and Social Perspectives
Chapter 16. Genetics, Aging, and Primary care: Ethical Implications for Clinicians
Chapter 17. Aging, Genetics, and Social Justice
Chapter 18. The Ethics of Aging: Question of Ends at the End of Life
Chapter 19. A Lonely New World-or Me, Myself, and I
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"