What Kind of Doing is Clinical Ethics?

Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 26 (1):7-24 (2005)
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Abstract

This paper discusses the importance of Richard M. Zaner’s work on clinical ethics for answering the question: what kind of doing is ethics consultation? The paper argues first, that four common approaches to clinical ethics – applied ethics, casuistry, principlism, and conflict resolution – cannot adequately address the nature of the activity that makes up clinical ethics; second, that understanding the practical character of clinical ethics is critically important for the field; and third, that the practice of clinical ethics is bound up with the normative commitments of medicine as a therapeutic enterprise.

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original Agich, George J. (2004) "What kind of doing is clinical ethics?". Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 26(1):7-24

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George Agich
Bowling Green State University

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