24 found
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  1.  18
    Setting Health Care Priorities: Oregon's Next Steps.Charles J. Dougherty - 1991 - Hastings Center Report 21 (3):1-10.
  2. Ethics at Work.Jeffery Cederblom, Charles J. Dougherty, W. Michael Hoffman, Jennifer Mills Moore, Larue Tone Hosmer & John B. Matthews - 1993 - Journal of Business Ethics 12 (1):36-74.
     
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  3. The costs of commercial medicine.Charles J. Dougherty - 1990 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 11 (4).
    The purpose of this paper is to review the rising influence of commercialism in American medicine and to examine some of the consequences of this trend. Increased competition subverts physician collegiality, draws hospitals into for-profit ownership and behavior, and leads clinical investigators into secrecy and possibly into bias and abuse. Medicine faces a deprofessionalization evidenced in loss of control over the clinical setting and over self-regulation. Health care becomes a commodity relying on cultivation of desires instead of satisfaction of needs, (...)
     
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  4.  21
    Health Care Reform and the Battle for the Body Politic.Charles J. Dougherty, Norman Daniels, Donald W. Leight, Ronald L. Kaplan & Dan E. Beauchamp - 1997 - Hastings Center Report 27 (4):39.
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  5.  15
    Ethical Perspectives on Prospective Payment.Charles J. Dougherty - 1989 - Hastings Center Report 19 (1):5-11.
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  6.  54
    Physicians' Duty of Compassion.Charles J. Dougherty & Ruth Purtilo - 1995 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 4 (4):426.
    This is a time of change in American healthcare. Market forces are restructuring local delivery systems around competing managed care networks. Many leading proposals for healthcare reform intend a reshaping of the national healthcare marketplace itself. Periods of change create an opportunity to reassess traditional values and practices. Such reassessments can be used to help insure that current innovations and proposed reforms preserve and strengthen the best in the traditions of medicine. A legitimate focus of concern in the medical and (...)
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  7.  11
    Joining in life and death: on separating the Lakeberg twins.Charles J. Dougherty - 1994 - Bioethics Forum 11 (1):9-16.
  8.  19
    The Significance of Husserl's Logical Investigations.Charles J. Dougherty - 1979 - Philosophy Today 23 (3):217.
  9.  15
    An Axiology for National Health Insurance.Charles J. Dougherty - 1992 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 20 (1-2):82-91.
  10.  61
    Drgs: The Counterrevolution In Financing Health Care.Charles J. Dougherty & Danielle A. Dolenc - 1985 - Hastings Center Report 15 (3):19-29.
    DRGs may contain costs, but they threaten to restrict access to health care, to compromise its quality, and to impede the development of new medical technologies. Immediate corrections are necessary to ensure that hospitals continue to serve the poorest and sickest.
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  11.  17
    How to Make Our Ideas Safe.Charles J. Dougherty - 1978 - New Scholasticism 52 (2):202-213.
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  12.  3
    Ideal, Fact, and Medicine: A Philosophy for Health Care.Charles J. Dougherty - 1985
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  13.  19
    Mind, Money, and Morality: Ethical Dimensions of Economic Change in American Psychiatry.Charles J. Dougherty - 1988 - Hastings Center Report 18 (3):15-20.
    Pressures to contain budgets and provide cost‐effective care are widespread in the American health care system, no less in psychiatry than elsewhere. The ethical implications of such economically motivated trends, however, become even more important in the area of psychiatric medicine.
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  14.  20
    On the Road to Jericho.Charles J. Dougherty - 1999 - Christian Bioethics 5 (1):66-74.
    Identifying what the differences are or ought to be between Catholic health care organizations and their non-Catholic counterparts is the subject of great debate. The author responds to the essays in this volume by Dennis Brodeur, Clarke E. Cochran and Christopher J. Kauffman, each of which represents a different perspective in the discussion of what is unique about Catholic health care.
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  15. Phenomenological Critiques of Empiricism: A Study in the Philosophies of Husserl and Peirce.Charles J. Dougherty - 1975 - Dissertation, University of Notre Dame
  16.  63
    Peirce's Phenomenological Defense of Deduction.Charles J. Dougherty - 1980 - The Monist 63 (3):364-374.
    Since the publication of Husserl's Logische Untersuchungen at the outset of this century, the notion of phenomenology has had a long and important history on the European continent. Of the many claims made on its behalf perhaps the most interesting is that phenomenology is able to ground philosophical assertions in a manner which is neither purely formal nor purely empirical, i.e., that phenomenology as a method is capable of transcending this very distinction. For example, phenomenologists argue that their reduction of (...)
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  17.  70
    Philosophical Role-Playing.Charles J. Dougherty - 1981 - Teaching Philosophy 4 (1):39-45.
  18.  22
    The Common Root of Husserl’s and Peirce’s Phenomenologies.Charles J. Dougherty - 1980 - New Scholasticism 54 (3):305-325.
  19.  50
    Teaching Ethics in Law School.Charles J. Dougherty - 1985 - Teaching Philosophy 8 (1):13-25.
  20.  54
    The Good Lawyer.Charles J. Dougherty - 1985 - Teaching Philosophy 8 (2):169-171.
  21.  17
    The Significance of Husserl's.Charles J. Dougherty - 1979 - Philosophy Today 23 (3):217-225.
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  22.  45
    Bad faith and victimblaming: The limits of health promotion. [REVIEW]Charles J. Dougherty - 1993 - Health Care Analysis 1 (2):111-119.
    Two models of the relationship between individual behaviour and health status are examined. On the Freedom Model, the individual is presumed to be capable of free choices including many that have important health consequences. Freedom entails accountability. Thus individuals can be held responsible for health conditions that result from choices they have made. To hold otherwise—to refuse to acknowledge the freedom and responsibilities of individuals—is bad faith. On the Facticity Model, behaviour is a result of facts—genetic and environmental—beyond an individual's (...)
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  23.  26
    And Still the Only Advanced Nation without Universal Health Coverage. [REVIEW]Charles J. Dougherty - 1997 - Hastings Center Report 27 (4):39-41.
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  24.  22
    Review of Thomas M. Gannon: The Catholic Challenge to the American Economy: Reflections on the U.S. Bishops' Pastoral Letter on Catholic Social Teaching and the U.S. Economy[REVIEW]Charles J. Dougherty - 1988 - Ethics 99 (1):185-186.