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Law, Religion, and Health in the United States

Cohen, I. Glenn(Edited by)Lynch, Holly Fernandez(Edited by)Sepper, Elizabeth(Edited by)
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While the law can create conflict between religion and health, it can also facilitate religious accommodation and protection of conscience.

Finding this balance is critical to addressing the most pressing questions at the intersection of law, religion, and health in the United States: should physicians be required to disclose their religious beliefs to patients?

How should we think about institutional conscience in the health care setting?

How should health care providers deal with families with religious objections to withdrawing treatment?

In this timely book, experts from a variety of perspectives and disciplines offer insight on these and other pressing questions, describing what the public discourse gets right and wrong, how policymakers might respond, and what potential conflicts may arise in the future.

It should be read by academics, policymakers, and anyone else - patient or physician, secular or devout - interested in how US law interacts with health care and religion.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1316732673 / 9781316732670
eBook (EPUB)
03/07/2017
English
427 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%