Sliding "Off" the Sliding Scale: Allowing Hope, Determining Capacity, and Providing Meaning When an Illness Is Becoming Worse but a Treatment May Help
Creator
Howe, Edmund G
Bibliographic Citation
The Journal of clinical ethics 2010 Summer; 21(2): 91-100
Abstract
In this issue of The Journal of Clinical Ethics, Emily Bell and Eric Racine are guest editors of a special section focusing on the use of deep brain stimulation (DBS) to treat Parkinson's disease. In "Deep Brain Stimulation, Ethics, and Society," Bell and Racine report that DBS already has been used to treat more than 50,000 patients. The ethical issues raised in this special section are important not only in regard to Parkinson's disease and DBS, but in many areas of medicine. The articles discuss sound, state-of-the-art ethical approaches. This introduction to the issue presents approaches that are adjunctive and intended to increase careproviders' options, that should increase careproviders' ability to individualize the care that they provide to their patients.
Permanent Link
Find in a Libraryhttp://hdl.handle.net/10822/1022820
Date
2010-06Collections
Metadata
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Allowing Patients to Find Meaning Where They Can
Howe, Edmund G. (2002-09)