ABSTRACT

Presuming readers start with no background in philosophy, this enhanced introduction to bioethics first provides balanced, philosophically based coverage of moral reasoning, moral theories, and the law. It then leads the newly equipped reader to explore a range of important ethical issues in health care and biomedical research.

Engaging Bioethics, Second Edition is designed for undergraduates throughout the humanities and social sciences as well as for healthcare professionals-in-training, including students in medical school, pre-medicine, nursing, public health, and those studying to assist physicians in various capacities. Along with coverage of standard bioethical issues—such as vaccination, access to health care, new reproductive technologies, genetics, research on human and animal subjects, abortion, medical confidentiality, and disclosure—it now addresses ethical aspects of the Covid-19 pandemic, the US Supreme Court’s Dobbs v Jackson decision, use of CRISPR for human gene editing, and the expansion of medically assisted death globally.

Key Features

  • Flexibility for the instructor, with chapters that can be read independently and in an order that fits the course structure
  • Integration with case studies and primary sources
  • Attention to issues of gender, race, cultural diversity, and justice in health care
  • Pedagogical features to help instructors and students
  • A companion website (www.routledge.com/cw/seay) with a virtual anthology linking to key primary sources, a test bank, topics for papers, and PowerPoints for lectures and class discussion

Key Updates to the Second Edition

  • An expanded treatment of vaccination ethics
  • A new chapter wholly devoted to the tools of moral thinking
  • Additional topics on the patient–healthcare professional relationship such as social nudging in health care and public health, and the limits of beneficence in connection with the burnout of frontline healthcare workers during the Covid-19 pandemic
  • New, up-to-date cases and questions for further discussion throughout the chapters
  • Updated learning objectives and overviews for each chapter

part I|112 pages

Bioethics: Its Nature, Methods, and Relation to Ethics

chapter 2|24 pages

The Tools of Ethical Inquiry

chapter 3|36 pages

Philosophical Accounts of Morality

part II|53 pages

The Patient–Healthcare Professional Relationship

chapter 5|27 pages

Managing Personal Medical Information

chapter 6|25 pages

Consent with Competence and Without

part III|81 pages

Moral Issues at the End of Life

chapter 7|20 pages

Death and Dying

chapter 8|20 pages

When Life Supports Are Futile or Refused

chapter 9|20 pages

Medically Assisted Death

part IV|71 pages

Moral Issues at the Beginning of Life

part V|98 pages

Medicine and Society

chapter 14|26 pages

The Genetic Revolution

chapter 15|21 pages

Biomedical Research on Animals

chapter 16|21 pages

Biomedical Research on Humans

chapter 17|29 pages

Justice in Health Care