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Death Determination by Neurologic Criteria: Areas of Consensus and Controversy

Bernat, James L.(Edited by)Lewis, Ariane(Edited by)
Part of the Advances in Neuroethics series
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This book presents principal controversies over the determination of death by neurologic criteria ("brain death").

The editors and authors are exceedingly well-versed in this subject and are on the forefront of the current debates.

The content is divided in the following disciplinary: philosophical (conceptual), medical, scientific, legal, religious, and ethical/social.

Many of the topics feature pro-con debates, allowing readers to consider the merits of the arguments and decide their own position.

The work is targeted to clinicians and nurses who treat critically ill and dying patients, organ donation personnel, ethicists and philosophers who write on end-of-life issues, and lawyers and legislative/public policy professionals who draft laws on death determination.

It identifies and debates the essential controversies currently raging in academic and public policy circles over the medical adequacy, scientific validity, and conceptual coherence of death determination by neurologic criteria.

Whether a professional or a student, the reader will be given a comprehensive course in the most pressing controversies and areas of consensus in the determination of death by neurologic criteria.

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£139.50
Product Details
3031159470 / 9783031159473
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
616.078
01/01/2023
Switzerland
English
555 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%