Brings together the work of leading experts from the fields of bioethics, health and medical law, the medical humanities, biomedicine, the medical sciences, philosophy, and history. Focuses on the centrality of the Declaration of Helsinki to the protection of human subjects involved in experimentation.
Discusses individual, collective, and institutional responsibilities with regard to vaccination from the perspective of philosophy and public health ethics. It addresses the issue of what it means for a collective to be morally responsible for the realization of herd immunity and what the implications of collective responsibility are for individual and institutional responsibilities.
LIMITED TO 1 CONCURRENT USER. PLEASE CLOSE WHEN FINISHED TO ALLOW OTHERS TO USE THE BOOK. An account of the nature of bioethics and how a number of methodological spectres have obstructed bioethics from becoming what it should. Explains how moral reason can be brought to bear upon practical issues via an empirical Socratic approach.