ABSTRACT

"Rationing Medical Care on the Basis of Age" explores this highly topical issue and presents a critical argument on the nature of the possible crisis. Its in-depth philosophical analysis of the main ethical positions adopts an interdisciplinary and international approach. This book is important reading for healthcare policy makers and shapers and healthcare managers. Academics in ethics, philosophy, economics, and all healthcare disciplines will find it useful, as will public health specialists, health economists, and social scientists with an interest in health and medicine. The authors of this book have opened up significant new perspectives on many important issues which in practice confront politicians, managers, professionals, patients and the public today. They have done this moreover in a way that is highly accessible to a non-specialist readership.

chapter 1|8 pages

Perceptions of crisis

chapter 2|12 pages

The costs of ageing

chapter 4|12 pages

Ethics and the 'crisis'

chapter 6|10 pages

Ethics and resource allocation

chapter 7|14 pages

Callahan and the significance of age

chapter 8|14 pages

A critique of Callahan

chapter 9|10 pages

A crisis of ageing?

chapter 10|6 pages

Policy implications