Psychiatry presents a unique array of difficult ethical questions. However, a major challenge is to approach psychiatry in a way that does justice to the real ethical issues. Recently there has been a growing body of research in empirical psychiatric ethics, and an increased interest in how empirical and philosophical methods can be combined. Empirical Ethics in Psychiatry demonstrates how ethics can engage more closely with the reality of psychiatric practice and shows how empirical methodologies from the social sciences can help foster this link. The book is divided into two sections. In the…mehr
Psychiatry presents a unique array of difficult ethical questions. However, a major challenge is to approach psychiatry in a way that does justice to the real ethical issues. Recently there has been a growing body of research in empirical psychiatric ethics, and an increased interest in how empirical and philosophical methods can be combined. Empirical Ethics in Psychiatry demonstrates how ethics can engage more closely with the reality of psychiatric practice and shows how empirical methodologies from the social sciences can help foster this link. The book is divided into two sections. In the first section there are discussions of the possibility of empirical ethics from a theoretical standpoint and an overview of the history of empirical medical ethics in general. The second, larger section is made up of chapters, discussing specific research projects in empirical psychiatric ethics. The contributors reflect on their choice of method: how and why they combine empirical and philosophical work, and how the two approaches relate to each other. The chapters in the second part thus have two purposes. The first is to present examples of empirical ethics in psychiatry; the second is to reflect on the way in which empirical research can support ethical analysis. Empirical Ethics in Psychiatry is a unique contribution to bioethics and will be fascinating reading for all those working within the field, as well as mental health care professionals.
Guy Widdershoven is Professor of Ethics of Health Care and Scientific Director of the School for Public Health and Primary Care (CAPHRI) at Maastricht University. His research subject is hermeneutic ethics, especially in the area of chronic care (elderly care, psychiatry and care for people with an intellectual disability). He is one of the editors, with Richard Ashcroft, Anneke Lucassen, Michael Parker and Marian Verkerk of Case Analysis in Clinical Ethics (Cambridge University Press, 2005). Tony Hope is Professor of Medical Ethics at the Ethox Centre of the University of Oxford, and an Honorary Consultant Psychiatrist. He has carried out research in basic neuroscience and Alzheimer's Disease. Since 1990 he has focused on clinical ethics. His books include: the Oxford Handbook of Clinical Medicine (editions 1-4); Manage Your Mind; Medical Ethics and Law: the Core Curriculum; and Medical Ethics: A Very Short Introduction. John McMillan is Senior Lecturer in Medical Ethics at the Hull-York Medical School and the Philosophy Department, University of Hull. He is a deputy director of the Institute of Applied Ethics, University of Hull. His publications include articles and book chapters on the philosophy of psychiatry and Bioethics. He is co-editor of The Principles of Healthcare Ethics (with Richard Ashcroft, Angus Dawson and Heather Draper; 2007). He is co-author of Consciousness and Intentionality (with Grant Gillett; 2001). Lieke van der Scheer studied philosophy and wrote her Ph.D. dissertation on Unregulated Morality: Dewey's Concept of Experience as a Basis for Health Ethics (in Dutch). Her publications concern the methodology and the theory of empirical ethical research as well as the ethical aspect of care practice. Besides teaching ethics at the Faculty Health, Medicine and Life Sciences of Maastricht University, she also teaches and trains professionals in the care sector. She is a member of various institutional review boards in charge of ethically testing medical research with human subjects.
Inhaltsangabe
* 1: Guy Widdershoven, John McMillan, Tony Hope and Lieke van der Scheer: Introduction * 2: John McMillan and Tony Hope: The possibility of empirical psychiatric ethics * 3: Guy Widdershoven and Lieke van der Scheer: Theory and methodology of empirical ethics: a pragmatic hermeneutic perspective * 4: Pascal Borry, Paul Schotsmans and Kris Dierickx: The origin and emergence of empirical ethics * 5: Jeannette Pols: Which empirical research, whose ethics? Articulating ideals in long term mental health care * 6: Anthony Colombo: Models of mental disorder: how philosophy and the social sciences can illuminate psychiatric ethics * 7: Minke Goldsteen: Empirical ethics in action in practices of dementia care * 8: Clive Baldwin: Family carers, ethics and dementia: an empirical study * 9: Julian C Hughes and Steven R Sabat: The advance directive conjuring trick and the person with dementia * 10: Marian Verkerk, Louis Polstra and Marlieke de Jonge: Coercion in psychiatric care: a sociological and ethical case history analysis * 11: Rob H van Hooren, H W van den Borne, Leopold M G Curfs and Guy Widdershoven: Providing good care in the context of restrictive measures: the case of prevention of obesity in youngsters with Prader-Willi syndrome * 12: Ine Gremmen: Ulysses arrangements in psychiatry: from normative ethics to empirical research, and back * 13: Jacinta Tan and Tony Hope: Treatment refusal in anorexia nervosa: a challenge to current concepts of capacity * 14: Gwen Adshead, Christine Brown, Eva Skoe, Jonathan Glover and Sarah Nicholson: Studying moral reasoning in forensic psychiatric patients * 15: Sander Welie: Patient incompetence in the practice of old age psychiatry: the significance of empirical research for the law
* 1: Guy Widdershoven, John McMillan, Tony Hope and Lieke van der Scheer: Introduction * 2: John McMillan and Tony Hope: The possibility of empirical psychiatric ethics * 3: Guy Widdershoven and Lieke van der Scheer: Theory and methodology of empirical ethics: a pragmatic hermeneutic perspective * 4: Pascal Borry, Paul Schotsmans and Kris Dierickx: The origin and emergence of empirical ethics * 5: Jeannette Pols: Which empirical research, whose ethics? Articulating ideals in long term mental health care * 6: Anthony Colombo: Models of mental disorder: how philosophy and the social sciences can illuminate psychiatric ethics * 7: Minke Goldsteen: Empirical ethics in action in practices of dementia care * 8: Clive Baldwin: Family carers, ethics and dementia: an empirical study * 9: Julian C Hughes and Steven R Sabat: The advance directive conjuring trick and the person with dementia * 10: Marian Verkerk, Louis Polstra and Marlieke de Jonge: Coercion in psychiatric care: a sociological and ethical case history analysis * 11: Rob H van Hooren, H W van den Borne, Leopold M G Curfs and Guy Widdershoven: Providing good care in the context of restrictive measures: the case of prevention of obesity in youngsters with Prader-Willi syndrome * 12: Ine Gremmen: Ulysses arrangements in psychiatry: from normative ethics to empirical research, and back * 13: Jacinta Tan and Tony Hope: Treatment refusal in anorexia nervosa: a challenge to current concepts of capacity * 14: Gwen Adshead, Christine Brown, Eva Skoe, Jonathan Glover and Sarah Nicholson: Studying moral reasoning in forensic psychiatric patients * 15: Sander Welie: Patient incompetence in the practice of old age psychiatry: the significance of empirical research for the law
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