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Chapters from Ethical Dilemmas at the End of Life
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Chapter 1: Philosophical Principals of Ethical Judgments
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Chapter 1: Philosophical Principals of Ethical Judgments
In the opening chapter, James Werth Jr., PhD, discusses the five ethical meta-principles—nonmaleficence, beneficence, autonomy, justice, and fidelity—that frame end-of-life ethics and how they supplement and complement professional codes of ethics and the law.

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Chapter 2: Religious, Spiritual, and Ideological Perspectives on Ethics at the End of Life
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Chapter 2: Religious, Spiritual, and Ideological Perspectives on Ethics at the End of Life
By comparing how they treat modern end-of-life ethical dilemmas, Cynthia B. Cohen, PhD, JD, shows how the world's major faiths extract specific positions from their overarching ethical principles.

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Chapter 3: Cultural and Religious Views on Nonbeneficial Treatment
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Chapter 3: Cultural and Religious Views on Nonbeneficial Treatment
This chapter by Noel Tiano, ThD, and Elizabeth Webb Beyer, RN, MS, JD, sheds light on the different cultural and religious perspectives on nonbeneficial treatment—treatment that only prolongs life without improving the medical status. It argues for a balance between patient autonomy and other values, including beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice, compassion, care, and societal responsibility.

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Chapter 4: Ethics, End-of-Life Care, and the Law: Overview
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Chapter 4: Ethics, End-of-Life Care, and the Law: Overview
Emerging medical technologies have changed the way we make end-of-life decisions. As we have more options to artificially extend life, our thinking about death has shifted. The law, also, has changed. Alan Meisel and Bruce Jennings trace this history and go on to explore how legal norms and medical practice change together.

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Chapter 5: How Americans Want to Die—Grassroots Values and Cultural Diversity
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Chapter 5: How Americans Want to Die—Grassroots Values and Cultural Diversity
Using data from surveys and interviews, Bruce Jennings shows how Americans' view of what constitutes a good death—holistic, family-centered care and effective palliation—transcend cultural and religious differences. It is this model of care, the hospice model, that has become the American expectation of a meaningful end-of-life experience.

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Chapter 6: Autonomy, Consent, and Advance Directives
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Chapter 6: Autonomy, Consent, and Advance Directives
William M. Lamers Jr., MD, investigates three important concepts in bioethics: autonomy, the right of the individual to make his or her own decisions; consent, the right to knowledge and approval of treatment; and the advanced directive, a legal document that formalizes a patient's autonomy in case he or she were to lose decision-making ability.

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Chapter 7: Initiating, Facilitating, and Honoring Conversations about Future Medical Care
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Chapter 7: Initiating, Facilitating, and Honoring Conversations about Future Medical Care
Bernard Hammes, PhD, and Linda Briggs, RN, MSN, MA, offer a guide for health care workers on how to initiate and facilitate conversations about advanced care planning with their patients. The chapter gives four primary suggestions: initiate the conversation in a way that builds a good therapeutic relationship; understand the patient's values and experiences; help him or her understand specific possible care scenerios; and, assist in the selection of a surrogate decision-maker.

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Chapter 8: When Families Disagree: Family Conflict and Decisions
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Chapter 8: When Families Disagree: Family Conflict and Decisions
Samira K. Beckwith, CEO of Hope Hospice and Palliative Care, discusses some of the more contentious end-of-life issues that families must face, including information sharing, where to keep the ailing family member, the funeral arragements, and settlement of the estate. She argues a strong case for advanced directives to minimize the chance of family conflict and then explains how hospice can help.

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Chapter 9: Ethical Dilemmas in Surrogate Decision Making
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Chapter 9: Ethical Dilemmas in Surrogate Decision Making
Scholar Bruce Jennings discusses patient autonomy and the role of family by asking some important questions: Can we realistically expect the surrogate to simply follow the will of the patient in a rapidly changing context? Can we really expect surrogates to put aside their own values, hopes, and emotions? Finally, what is the role of the care provider in assisting the surrogate, especially when the patient has no close friends or family?

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Chapter 10: Rational Suicide in Terminal Illness: The Ethics of Intervention and Assistance
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Chapter 10: Rational Suicide in Terminal Illness: The Ethics of Intervention and Assistance
Thomas Attig, PhD, explores the rationality of suicide and the ethics of physician-assisted suicide. He reserves labeling suicide as rational for only a few specific circumstances. He then outlines the two most important considerations for physician-assisted suicide: ethics and legality.

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Chapter 11: Ethical Dilemmas in Hospice Care
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Chapter 11: Ethical Dilemmas in Hospice Care
Richard Fife, PhD, applies concepts such as autonomy and futility to certain concrete medical situations: withdrawing hydration, artificial nutrition, resuscitation, and palliation. He concludes that hospice ethics committees have great value and are a great complement to the team-centered hospice philosophy of care.

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Chapter 12: A Life Cut Short: When Children Die
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Chapter 12: A Life Cut Short: When Children Die
Professor Craig M. Klugman discusses what makes pediatric end-of-life care ethically unique. Children lack autonomy and are therefore unable to give consent. He offers informed assent as an alternative. Under this principle, children are informed in a way consistent with their level of development, and agreement is sought for decisions made in their name.

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Chapter 13: Living and Dying in Nursing Homes
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Chapter 13: Living and Dying in Nursing Homes
In this chapter, Sandra H. Johnson, JD, addresses how hospice care and long-term care facilities interact and how the changing culture of long-term care can impede effective hospice care. As long-term facilities such as nursing homes shift their focus from custodial care to rehabilitative care, they cease to see themselves as proper homes, and thus cease to see themselves as a place to die. Despite this, and despite the hindrances given to palliation by tight regulation of long-term care facilities, Johnson argues that patients have the right to die in place, even if the place is a nursing home.

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Chapter 14: Organ Donation: Ethical Issues and Issues of Loss and Grief
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Chapter 14: Organ Donation: Ethical Issues and Issues of Loss and Grief
Charles A. Corr, PhD, asks how issues revolving around organ donation affect grief and its treatment. He treats three types of organ donation—those made after brain death, those made after cardiac death, and living donations—and then explains why transplant organizations should acknowledge and provide support for those coping with grief.

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Chapter 15: The Ethics of Excess and Deprivation: Implications for End-of-Life Care
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Chapter 15: The Ethics of Excess and Deprivation: Implications for End-of-Life Care
End-of-life care in particular, and the entire American health care system in general, can be characterized by a polarizing distribution of excess and deprivation. Larry R. Churchill, PhD, explores this paradox and continues on by outlining how poor health care policies can confound grief and its treatment.

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