Dialogue 37 (3):590-591 (
1998)
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Abstract
Health Care Ethics is another addition to the growing number of texts that attempt to provide a much-needed Canadian perspective on many of the issues that arise in the delivery of health care. The readings are divided into three parts: “The Nature and Context of Health Care Ethics”; “Decision-Making in Health Care”; and “Decisions Near the Beginning and End of Life.” Collectively, they cover a variety of different issues—pluralism and multiculturalism, resource allocation and rationing, consent, research involving human subjects, genetics, abortion, assisted reproductive technologies, euthanasia, and assisted suicide. The editorial introductions to these issues, while well written, readable, and clear, are general and deliberately non-committal in assessing the different and competing approaches and arguments reflected in the selected articles in which these issues are discussed.