This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Duke University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
The Critical Vocation of the Essay
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface to the Third Edition ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Experiences of Illness and Clinician-Patient Relationships
- Silver Water 7
- “Is She Experiencing Any Pain?” 15
- The Cost of Appearances 20
- The Ship Pounding 25
- God at the Bedside 27
- The Use of Force 32
- Sunday Dialogue 36
- What the Doctor Said 42
-
Part II. Professionalism and the Culture of Medicine
- The Learning Curve 45
- The Perfect Code 63
- Coeur d’Alene 78
- The “Worthy” Patient 82
- How Doctors Think 95
- Healing Skills for Medical Practice 101
- The Hair Stylist, the Corn Merchant, and the Doctor 111
- Necessary Accessories 127
- The Critical Vocation of the Essay 132
- The Art of Medicine 140
- Script 145
- Ordinary Medicine 149
- “ Ethics and Clinical Research” 154
-
Part III. Health Care Ethics and the Clinician’s Role
- Glossary of Basic Ethical Concepts in Health Care and Research 167
- Ethics in Medicine 175
- Historical and Contemporary Codes of Ethics 191
- Enduring and Emerging Challenges of Informed Consent 197
- Teaching the Tyranny of the Form 212
- A Terrifying Truth 218
- The Lie 222
- Discharge Decisions and the Dignity of Risk 224
- No One Needs to Know 229
-
Part IV. Death, Dying, and Lives at the Margins
- Forty Years of Work on End-of- Life Care 239
- Try to Remember Some Details 249
- Failing to Thrive? 251
- The Dead Donor Rule and Organ Transplantation 259
- The Darkening Veil of “Do Everything” 263
- Death and Dignity 267
- Active and Passive Euthanasia 273
- Clinician-Patient Interactions about Requests for Physician-Assisted Suicide 280
- My Father’s Death 301
-
Part V. Allocation and Justice
- Glossary 311
- Dead Man Walking 316
- Full Disclosure 320
- Seven Sins of Humanitarian Medicine 325
- About the Editors 353
- Index 355
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface to the Third Edition ix
- Introduction 1
-
Part I. Experiences of Illness and Clinician-Patient Relationships
- Silver Water 7
- “Is She Experiencing Any Pain?” 15
- The Cost of Appearances 20
- The Ship Pounding 25
- God at the Bedside 27
- The Use of Force 32
- Sunday Dialogue 36
- What the Doctor Said 42
-
Part II. Professionalism and the Culture of Medicine
- The Learning Curve 45
- The Perfect Code 63
- Coeur d’Alene 78
- The “Worthy” Patient 82
- How Doctors Think 95
- Healing Skills for Medical Practice 101
- The Hair Stylist, the Corn Merchant, and the Doctor 111
- Necessary Accessories 127
- The Critical Vocation of the Essay 132
- The Art of Medicine 140
- Script 145
- Ordinary Medicine 149
- “ Ethics and Clinical Research” 154
-
Part III. Health Care Ethics and the Clinician’s Role
- Glossary of Basic Ethical Concepts in Health Care and Research 167
- Ethics in Medicine 175
- Historical and Contemporary Codes of Ethics 191
- Enduring and Emerging Challenges of Informed Consent 197
- Teaching the Tyranny of the Form 212
- A Terrifying Truth 218
- The Lie 222
- Discharge Decisions and the Dignity of Risk 224
- No One Needs to Know 229
-
Part IV. Death, Dying, and Lives at the Margins
- Forty Years of Work on End-of- Life Care 239
- Try to Remember Some Details 249
- Failing to Thrive? 251
- The Dead Donor Rule and Organ Transplantation 259
- The Darkening Veil of “Do Everything” 263
- Death and Dignity 267
- Active and Passive Euthanasia 273
- Clinician-Patient Interactions about Requests for Physician-Assisted Suicide 280
- My Father’s Death 301
-
Part V. Allocation and Justice
- Glossary 311
- Dead Man Walking 316
- Full Disclosure 320
- Seven Sins of Humanitarian Medicine 325
- About the Editors 353
- Index 355