Preface to the New Edition |
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ix | |
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Introduction to the New Edition |
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1 | (8) |
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9 | (8) |
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2 The Legal Context of Medical Experimentation |
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17 | (36) |
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18 | (6) |
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24 | (7) |
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2.2.1 The Meaning of Consent |
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24 | (1) |
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2.2.2 Qualifications of the Requirement of Informed Consent |
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25 | (3) |
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2.2.3 Overriding the Patient's Failure to Consent |
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28 | (2) |
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2.2.4 Withdrawal of Consent and the Continuing Duty to Disclose |
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30 | (1) |
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2.3 General Legal Principles Applied to Medical Experimentation |
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31 | (12) |
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2.3.1 Non-therapeutic Experimentation |
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33 | (2) |
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2.3.2 Therapeutic Experimentation |
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35 | (1) |
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2.3.3 Mixed Therapeutic and Non-therapeutic Research: The Problem of the Randomized Clinical Trial |
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36 | (7) |
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2.4 Participation in Experimentation as a Condition of Medical Treatment |
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43 | (4) |
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2.5 Statutes and Regulations |
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47 | (6) |
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3 The Concept of Personal Care |
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53 | (37) |
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3.1 Do Randomized Clinical Trials Really Pose a Dilemma? |
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57 | (12) |
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3.1.1 The Burdens on the Experimental Subject |
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57 | (7) |
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3.1.2 Is Personal Care a Coherent Concept? |
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64 | (3) |
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3.1.3 The Terms of the Conflict: Distributive Justice and Rights |
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67 | (2) |
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69 | (7) |
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3.3 The Good of Personal Care |
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76 | (14) |
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4 Personal Care: Interests or Rights |
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90 | (28) |
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4.1 Economic Theory and Medical Care |
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91 | (9) |
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91 | (6) |
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97 | (3) |
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4.2 The Concept of Rights |
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100 | (5) |
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4.2.1 Rights and Efficiency |
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100 | (4) |
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4.2.2 Negative and Positive Rights |
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104 | (1) |
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4.3 Personal Integrity the Goals of Medicine, and Rights in Personal Care |
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105 | (13) |
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107 | (2) |
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109 | (1) |
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4.3.3 The Function of Medical Care |
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110 | (3) |
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4.3.4 Rights in Medical Care: Lucidity Autonomy, Fidelity, Humanity |
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113 | (5) |
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5 Realizing Rights---Medical Care in General |
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118 | (39) |
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5.1 Preliminary Speculation: The Antinomy of the Personal and the Social |
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120 | (9) |
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5.1.1 Political Versus Ethical Theory |
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121 | (3) |
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5.1.2 The Theory of Democracy |
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124 | (2) |
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5.1.3 What Are We Entitled to Ask of Theory? |
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126 | (3) |
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5.2 Two Models of the Health Care System |
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129 | (19) |
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131 | (11) |
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142 | (4) |
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5.2.3 The Department of Health |
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146 | (2) |
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5.3 The Antinomy Confronted: Putting the Two Models Together |
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148 | (9) |
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5.3.1 The Rightness of Queuing |
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148 | (7) |
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5.3.2 The Obligations of Bureaucrats |
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155 | (2) |
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6 The Practice of Experimentation |
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157 | (84) |
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6.1 Some Recent Randomized Clinical Trials |
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159 | (5) |
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6.1.1 The Veterans Administration Cooperative Study Group: Clinical Trial of Anti-Hypertensive Therapy |
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159 | (1) |
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6.1.2 The University Group Collaborative Oral Anti-Diabetic Agent Randomized Clinical Trial |
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160 | (1) |
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6.1.3 Coronary Bypass Surgery |
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161 | (1) |
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6.1.4 The Salk Polio Vaccine Trial |
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162 | (2) |
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6.2 The Concept of Professional Knowledge |
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164 | (4) |
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6.3 Rights in Experimentation |
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168 | (5) |
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6.3.1 Lucidity and the Duty of Candor |
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168 | (3) |
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6.3.2 Autonomy and the Concept of Professional Accountability |
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171 | (1) |
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6.3.3 Fidelity and Humanity |
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172 | (1) |
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6.4 Rights in Experimentation: Implementation and Accommodations |
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173 | (68) |
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6.4.1 Alternatives to Randomized Controlled Trials |
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174 | (4) |
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6.4.2 Accommodation by Differentiation of Role |
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178 | (5) |
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6.4.3 Compensation and Participation |
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183 | (9) |
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From Medical Experimentation to Non-Medical Experimentation: What Can and Cannot Be Learned from Medicine as to the Ethics of Legal and Other Non-Medical Experiments? |
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192 | (28) |
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220 | (21) |
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Index |
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241 | |