Intensive Care
Medical Ethics and the Medical Profession
9780226996356
Intensive Care
Medical Ethics and the Medical Profession
In riveting case studies, Robert Zussman describes how medical decisions in ICUs are considered and reconsidered, made and remade, negotiated and renegotiated. He concentrates on the practice of medical ethics, on the ways in which right and wrong are interpreted and used in the ward—how definitions of right and wrong emerge from the social situations of patients, families, doctors, and nurses and from the workings of hospitals and the courts.
His book is a portrait of the way careful planning is undermined by the unpredictability of illness and the persistence of self-interest, by high principle and curious compromise.
His book is a portrait of the way careful planning is undermined by the unpredictability of illness and the persistence of self-interest, by high principle and curious compromise.
260 pages | 11 line drawings, 3 tables | 6 x 9 | © 1992
Sociology: General Sociology, Medical Sociology
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
1: Medical Ethics and the Medical Profession
2: Intensive Care
Pt. 1: The Moral Order of Intensive Care
3: The Patient
4: Doctors: The Banality of Heroism
5: The Nurse’s Dilemma
6: Patienthood and the Culture of Rights
7: Patients and Families
Pt. 2: Medical Ethics: Triage and the Limitation of Treatment
8: "Penguins in the Basement"
9: Uncertainty, the Social Organization of Medicine, and Limitation of Treatment
10: Withholding, Withdrawing, and the "Terminal" Patient
11: Ethics, Families, and Technical Reason
12: The "Do Not Resuscitate" Order as Ritual
13: "A Legal Thing"
14: The Last Bed
15: Medicine’s Two Cultures
Appendix: On Method
General Index
Index of Doctors, Nurses, Patients, and Families of Patients
1: Medical Ethics and the Medical Profession
2: Intensive Care
Pt. 1: The Moral Order of Intensive Care
3: The Patient
4: Doctors: The Banality of Heroism
5: The Nurse’s Dilemma
6: Patienthood and the Culture of Rights
7: Patients and Families
Pt. 2: Medical Ethics: Triage and the Limitation of Treatment
8: "Penguins in the Basement"
9: Uncertainty, the Social Organization of Medicine, and Limitation of Treatment
10: Withholding, Withdrawing, and the "Terminal" Patient
11: Ethics, Families, and Technical Reason
12: The "Do Not Resuscitate" Order as Ritual
13: "A Legal Thing"
14: The Last Bed
15: Medicine’s Two Cultures
Appendix: On Method
General Index
Index of Doctors, Nurses, Patients, and Families of Patients
Be the first to know
Get the latest updates on new releases, special offers, and media highlights when you subscribe to our email lists!