TY - BOOK ID - 2491378 TI - If I were a rich man could I buy a pancreas ? : and other essays on the ethics of health care PY - 1992 VL - *1 SN - 0253313074 PB - Bloomington ; Indianapolis Indiana University Press DB - UniCat KW - Bioethics. KW - Medical ethics. KW - Bio-ethiek KW - Bioethics KW - Biologie humaine -- Morale et aspects éthiques KW - Biology--Moral and ethical aspects KW - Biomedical ethics KW - Biomedische ethiek KW - Biomédecine -- Morale et aspects éthiques KW - Bioéthique KW - Deontologie [Medische ] KW - Deontology [Medical ] KW - Déontologie médicale KW - Ethics [Medical ] KW - Ethiek [Medische ] KW - Ethiek in biologie KW - Ethique en biologie KW - Ethique médicale KW - Life sciences ethics KW - Life sciences--Moral and ethical aspects KW - Medical care -- Moral and ethical aspects KW - Medical deontology KW - Medical ethics KW - Medicine -- Moral and ethical aspects KW - Medische deontologie KW - Medische ethiek KW - Morale et médecine KW - Morale médicale KW - Médecine -- Innovations -- Morale et aspects éthiques KW - Médecine -- Morale et aspects éthiques KW - Médecine et morale KW - Politique sanitaire -- Morale et aspects éthiques KW - Soins médicaux -- Morale et aspects éthiques KW - Éthique clinique UR - http://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:2491378 AB - Arthur L. Caplan has been an important voice in bioethics for many years. In a great number of essays and articles he has taken on some of the most pressing issues in bioethics today. This book brings his most important work together with new essays on autonomy in nursing homes and on the ethical issues raised by the mapping and sequencing of the human genome. In an introductory essay Caplan updates some of his views and responds to criticisms. Caplan begins with a discussion the nature of work in applied ethics. He rejects the view that those who do bioethics or any other version of applied ethics are merely the servants of moral theoreticians. Next, Caplan examines some of the tough moral questions raised by the use of animals in biomedical research. While not recognizing that animals have rights, he argues for more humane treatment when they are used in scientific research. In a group of essays on human experimentation, Caplan studies such issues as privacy and the obligation to serve as a voluntary subject in medical experimentation. In subsequent essays, he explores the frontiers of medicine in genetics, reproductive technology, and transplantation and reviews the challenges posed to the American health care system as the population grows older. Caplan concludes by confronting the pressing public policy issues of cost containment and rationing. He rejects the view that rationing is the only means available for reducing the escalating costs of health care and suggests strategies that would control costs while affording access to basic medical care for every American. ER -