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Ethics, health policy and (anti-)aging : mixed blessings / Maartje Schermer, Wim Pinxten eds.

Springer Nature - Springer Medicine eBooks 2013 English International Available online

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Format:
Book
Conference/Event
Author/Creator:
International Conference on Ethics and Aging, Corporate Author.
Contributor:
Schermer, Maartje (Maartje Hannah Nicolette), 1969-
Pinxten, Wim.
Conference Name:
International Conference on Ethics and Aging (2011 : Amsterdam, Netherlands)
International Conference on Ethics and Aging
Series:
Ethics and health policy ; 2212-1536. v. 1.
Ethics and health policy, 2212-1536 ; vol. 1
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Older people--Medical care--Moral and ethical aspects.
Older people.
Health planning.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (298 p.)
Edition:
1st ed. 2013.
Place of Publication:
Dordrecht [etc.] : Springer, 2013.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
This volume is about the ethical and philosophical issues that arise in an aging society, and the implications of these issues for healthcare- and social policy. After a brief overview of biomedicine's changing approach of ageing and longevity and of the new expectations that these changes generate, various ethical, social, and policy issues that surround aging and longevity are discussed. First, the images and social meanings of aging and old age in our society are explored, including their normative dimensions and implications for policy. Next, ethical issues in the care for frail elderly are discussed, as well as notion of good care and end-of-life decisions. Finally, the ethical and social implications of emerging possibilities for anti-aging and lifespan extension are considered. The book concludes with an overview of the relevance of the issues discussed for policy making on professional, national and international levels.
Contents:
Schermer and Pinxten – Introduction
I. Science of on ageing and longevity
Wim Pinxten; Scientists expectations of (anti-) aging research
Joao De Magalhaes – Pertintent ethical issues in the genomics of ageing
II. Images of age and ageing
Soren Holm; Ecce Homo: the implicit anthropology of bioethics and the aging person
Wim Dekkers; An anthropology of the aging person
John Vincent; The anti-aging movement: contemporary cultures and the social construction of old age
Bert Keizer; Why we don’t like old people
Frans Meulenberg – Older people’s own views on age and aging
III Ethics in care for elderly
Cees Hertogh; Ethics and frail elderly
Frits de Lange; Imagining good aging
Govert den Hartogh - Death wishes of the elderly
Dorothea Touwen; Former wishes and current desires – demented patients and their family
members’ effort to decide what they would have wanted
Anders Schinkel; Justice and the elderly
IV Ethics and prolongevity
John Harris; Enhancement: longevity/immortality?
Hans van Delden; On the value of being mortal
Inez de Beaufort; Will you still love me when I’m..? On beauty and aging
Maartje Schermer; Old age is an incurable disease – or is it?
Marianne Boenink; On shifting disease concepts and molecular medicine
Hans Joerg Ehni; Life extension for all
Struijs, Ten Have, Willems; Healthy aging and personal responsibility
V Ethics in an aging society: policy implications
Goran Hermeren; Policy implications of views expressed in this volume. .
Notes:
Description based upon print version of record.
ISBN:
1-283-86552-1
94-007-3870-6
OCLC:
823384971

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