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Rethinking conscientious objection in health care / Alberto Giubilini, Udo Schuklenk, Francesca Minerva, and Julian Savulescu.

University Press Scholarship Online Complete Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Giubilini, Alberto, author.
Schüklenk, Udo, author.
Minerva, Francesca, 1981- author.
Savulescu, Julian, author.
Contributor:
Oxford Academic
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Refusal to treat--Moral and ethical aspects.
Refusal to treat.
Medical ethics.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (unpaged)
Place of Publication:
New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2025]
Contents:
Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Introduction
Conscientious objection: the problem
Why today?
The stance taken by professional associations
Health care systems without accommodation of conscientious objection
Overview of the argument
1 Conscience, Freedom of Conscience, and Conscientious Objection
Accommodation of conscientious objection in health care is not a human right
What is conscience and what is its place in the sphere of public reason?
Freedom of conscience and consistency
The compromise option: questioning the 'easy solution' to conflicts of conscience
What are the ethical issues raised by conscientious objection in health care?
Moving forward
2 The Argument against Conscientious Objection: On the Meaning and Ethical Relevance of Professionalism
Medical professionalism
The incompatibility thesis: a contractualist defence
The contract and the professional-patient relationship
What is owed to patients? Three criteria for professional obligations
What if professional standards are wrong and my conscience is right?
A professional conscience
Conscientious beliefs and conflict of interests
Aren't we reducing highly skilled doctors to mere technicians?
Harmful consequences of accommodation of conscientious objection
Non-harm-related ethical reasons against conscientious objection: fairness and collective professional responsibility
Should a health care professional ever be allowed to conscientiously object?
3 Defusing Arguments in Favour of Conscientious Objection
The argument from reasonability
First problem: Should the health care profession be liberal and pluralist?
Second problem: What is reasonable?
Reasonability of conscientious objection
Two arguments against the reasonability view: a summary
State neutrality and reasonability
Compromise views
Degrees of complicity
Are degrees of complicity intrinsic to certain activities or context dependent?
Is being complicit what really matters?
Cooperation in wrongdoing and the moderate approach
Possible solution
The human rights argument
The argument from toleration
The argument from diversity
The argument from doctor's integrity
The argument from equality of opportunity
4 Specific Cases
Actionable and non-actionable values
Conscientious objection as an omission
Abortion
Medical assistance in dying
Cosmetic plastic surgery
Health care services for same-sex and transgender people
Gender reassignment therapies
In-vitro fertilization for same-sex couples
Cases of proxy consent
Proxy consent for interventions that benefit the incompetent patient
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references.
Electronic reproduction. Oxford Available via World Wide Web.
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on January 29, 2025).
Other Format:
Print version: Giubilini, Alberto. Rethinking conscientious objection in health care.
ISBN:
9780197786567
0197786561
9780197786550
0197786553
Publisher Number:
90102091065
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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