Elements of Moral Experience in Clinical Ethics Training and Practice: Sharing Stories with Strangers
Autor Virginia L. Bartletten Limba Engleză Paperback – 6 dec 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781032408200
ISBN-10: 1032408200
Pagini: 172
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1032408200
Pagini: 172
Dimensiuni: 178 x 254 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Academic, Postgraduate, Professional, and Undergraduate AdvancedCuprins
Introduction
Part 1: Elements of Discovery
Chapter 1: Seminar in Strangeness
Chapter 2: Clinical Attention as Surrender-and-Catch
Interlude 1: Methods of Unknowing: Disruption and Attention
Part 2: Elements of Learning
Chapter 3: Self Reflection and Self Education in Clinical Ethics
Chapter 4: Affiliation and Attunement and Extra-Ordinary Discourse
Interlude 2: Methods for Learning with Others
Part 3: Elements of Experience
Chapter 5: Constituent Vulnerability, Constituent Responsibility
Chapter 6: Clinical Storytelling and Fragments of Experience
Continuing When There is No Ending
Part 1: Elements of Discovery
Chapter 1: Seminar in Strangeness
Chapter 2: Clinical Attention as Surrender-and-Catch
Interlude 1: Methods of Unknowing: Disruption and Attention
Part 2: Elements of Learning
Chapter 3: Self Reflection and Self Education in Clinical Ethics
Chapter 4: Affiliation and Attunement and Extra-Ordinary Discourse
Interlude 2: Methods for Learning with Others
Part 3: Elements of Experience
Chapter 5: Constituent Vulnerability, Constituent Responsibility
Chapter 6: Clinical Storytelling and Fragments of Experience
Continuing When There is No Ending
Recenzii
Elements of Moral Experience in Clinical Ethics Training and Practice: Sharing Stories with Strangers will be a significant and important contribution to the practice of clinical ethics consultation. Rather than merely tell readers what is relevant, Virginia Bartlett has invited them to engage with both the common and unique in clinical experiences. Professor Bartlett’s tolerance for the discomforts of taking a clear-eyed look creates this accessibility. With that careful eye and a generous voice, she provides opportunities for a reader to make their own assessment about the ways these stories match up with real life experiences in health care. Not only will the reader learn about the evident and the more subtle ways that a person working as an ethics consultant encounters people, questions, standpoints, even values, and so on, they will also learn about what actually happens in our very human experience of health care.
- Mark J. Bliton, PhD, Director of Medical Bioethics at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center in Los Angeles, CA. He is Editor, with Stuart G. Finder, PhD, of Peer Review, Peer Education, and Modeling in the Practice of Clinical Ethics Consultation: The Zadeh Project, Springer 2018.
"In this highly engaging and original work, Bartlett uses herself as an example to offer a deeply personal and realistic sense of what it actually is like to do ethics consultation, including the intellectual, emotional, and even physical experiences involved. In so doing, she exquisitely illuminates how clinical ethics practice is itself a kind of moral undergoing – one that entails far more than mastering and applying knowledge or rote skills."
- Stuart G. Finder, Ph.D., Director, Center for Healthcare Ethics, Cedars-Sinai
"In Elements of Moral Experience in Clinical Ethics Training and Practice, Dr. Bartlett shows practitioners of clinical ethics – and practitioners of being human - how to acknowledge their responsibility through the collective recollection of stories that help make sense of what it means to care for one another."
- Joseph B. Fanning, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Medicine, Associate Director, Center for Biomedical Ethics and Society, Vanderbilt University
"This book offers a unique, genre-bending text that would be useful to trainees, graduate students, instructors, and preceptors. There is a deficit of clinical ethics literature focused on the experience, to use the author’s own words, of “doing ethics.” The author’s use of stories from her training and career intermingled with reflection and theory is an innovative way to help students and trainees early in their career better understand the work of clinical ethics."
Stephanie Larson, Lecturer in the Department of English at Case Western University
- Mark J. Bliton, PhD, Director of Medical Bioethics at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center in Los Angeles, CA. He is Editor, with Stuart G. Finder, PhD, of Peer Review, Peer Education, and Modeling in the Practice of Clinical Ethics Consultation: The Zadeh Project, Springer 2018.
"In this highly engaging and original work, Bartlett uses herself as an example to offer a deeply personal and realistic sense of what it actually is like to do ethics consultation, including the intellectual, emotional, and even physical experiences involved. In so doing, she exquisitely illuminates how clinical ethics practice is itself a kind of moral undergoing – one that entails far more than mastering and applying knowledge or rote skills."
- Stuart G. Finder, Ph.D., Director, Center for Healthcare Ethics, Cedars-Sinai
"In Elements of Moral Experience in Clinical Ethics Training and Practice, Dr. Bartlett shows practitioners of clinical ethics – and practitioners of being human - how to acknowledge their responsibility through the collective recollection of stories that help make sense of what it means to care for one another."
- Joseph B. Fanning, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Medicine, Associate Director, Center for Biomedical Ethics and Society, Vanderbilt University
"This book offers a unique, genre-bending text that would be useful to trainees, graduate students, instructors, and preceptors. There is a deficit of clinical ethics literature focused on the experience, to use the author’s own words, of “doing ethics.” The author’s use of stories from her training and career intermingled with reflection and theory is an innovative way to help students and trainees early in their career better understand the work of clinical ethics."
Stephanie Larson, Lecturer in the Department of English at Case Western University
Notă biografică
Virginia L. Bartlett is an assistant professor of biomedical sciences and assistant director of the Center for Healthcare Ethics at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, CA. She is a past chair of the Clinical Ethics Consultation Affairs committee for the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities.
Descriere
Elements of Moral Experience in Clinical Ethics Training and Practice is a philosophical and professional memoir of the education, training and development of becoming a clinical ethics consultant.