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Legislating Medical Ethics : A Study of the New York State Do-Not-Resuscitate Law

Baker, R.B.(Edited by)Strosberg, M.(Edited by)Bynum, Jonathan(Assisted by)
Part of the Philosophy and Medicine series
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Can medical ethics be legislated? Can a complex bioethical question be definitively answered through legislation? In July 1987 the New York State legislature experimented with legislating medical ethics by amending the state's public health law to regulate `Do Not Resuscitate' orders. The consequent law was complex and remains controversial. This volume reviews both the background bioethical debates and the elements of the public policy making process that are essential to understanding New York's experience with the DNR law. It features debates between leading exponents and critics of the law; case studies that examine the impact of New York's DNR law on clinicians, hospitals and patients; and a review of all empirical studies of the law by their lead authors. Appended to the volume is the New York State DNR law and a comprehensive set of background documents.
The co-editors, Robert Baker and Martin A. Strosberg, are both professors at Union College, Schenectady, New York. They have collaborated on many projects including, Rationing America's Medical Care: The Oregon Plan and Beyond (Brookings, 1992).

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£24.99
Product Details
Springer
9401585946 / 9789401585941
Paperback
22/12/2012
152 x 229 mm, 717 grams