Being Beheld explores the standardization of clinical ethics techniques and articulates how its integrity depends on our dissent from such standardization. Moving between philosophical, theological, and practical lenses, it offers a reorientation of ethics to
participation in the good of the other, mirroring the Christian Eucharistic liturgy.
Being Beheld examines the techniques we use to approach ethical decisions in healthcare, arguing that ethical decision making in healthcare ought to be a work of conscience searching for a patient's good, rather than merely the deployment of correct techniques or methods. Offering a fresh analysis of both practical ethics and its methodology, with sustained attention on today's most popular clinical ethics methods, the book alternates from on-the-ground problems to theory and back again. The central claim is that a good ethics technique should mirror the eucharistic liturgy, which facilitates encounter, reciprocity, and humility. The book is a work in practical ethics, offering students a complete reorientation of ethics from either powerless or power-grab to participation in the good of the other. In short, the search for a patient's good should be an inherent aspect of every clinical encounter.
Offering case studies and lucid discussions of the current state of health care, Being Beheld is instructive to anyone who teaches, studies, or works in the areas of clinical ethics and health care.
Arvustused
This remarkable and important book argues that without a spiritual, liturgical and even religious dimension, medical ethics will always sacrifice the holistic interests of the patient to considerations of regular procedure and efficiency. Thoroughly recommended. -- C. J. C. Pickstock * Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge *
Muu info
Challenges standardized clinical ethics by advancing a Christian vision that centers ethical integrity on shared participation in the good of the other
Dedication
Acknowledgements
Prelude: Clinical Ethics and Standardization
Part 1: Standardized Clinical Ethics Consultation Techniques
Chapter 1: What is a Technique?
Chapter 2: What Does a Technique Do?
Chapter 3: The Four Boxes Method, Clinical Pragmatism, Bioethics Mediation,
and the VAs CASES Method
Chapter 4: Richard Zaners Phenomenological Method
Part 2: Practical Ethics as Liturgical Activity
Chapter 5: The Liturgys Participatory Ontology
Chapter 6: Practices of Participation, Not Power: Clinical Ethics
Consultation Techniques in a Liturgical
Postlude: An ASBH Case in a Liturgical Stance
Bibliography
Jordan Mason is a health care ethicist and theologian currently serving as a clinical ethicist for Providence St. Joseph Health in Northern California. She completed her doctoral studies in Health Care Ethics and Theology at St. Louis University, and holds a Master of Divinity from McAfee School of Theology in Atlanta. Jordan has published in a variety of academic journals, religious and secular, medical and theological, academic and practical.