
Modern medical technologies have given patients and their families new options at the end of life. These options are often accompanied by difficult medical and ethical questions. Ellen L. Csikai and Elizabeth Chaitin give social workers an expanded ethical base on which to ground their understandings and explanations of the end-of-life options available to patients and workers in healthcare environments. The authors connect long-standing philosophical theories to contemporary concerns in the field of bioethics.In addition to theoretical issues, the authors include case studies to show the complex end-of-life decisions faced by patients, families, and health care workers. In order to help make these decisions, Csikai and Chaitin discuss how to assess knowledge; create treatment and intervention plans; and cultivate empowerment, teamwork, and cultural sensitivity. The authors, experienced social workers, offer approaches for resolving debates about informed consent, privacy and confidentiality, and the refusal or denial of medical treatment. The authors offer both ethical and practical methods for dealing with the potentially charged decisions and negotiations between patients, families, and healthcare workers.Unlike other books that focus entirely on the moral consequences and concerns at the end of life, Ethics in End-of-Life Decisions in Social Work Practice combines moral understanding and analysis with a practical and active approach.
How can social workers effectively navigate the complex ethical and practical dilemmas inherent in end-of-life medical decision-making? Authors Elizabeth Chaitin and Ellen L. Csikai, both experienced practitioners in the field, synthesize philosophical bioethical theories with the realities of modern clinical environments. They argue that social workers require a robust, multifaceted framework to support patients and families through high-stakes negotiations regarding treatment, consent, and privacy. By bridging abstract moral philosophy with concrete intervention strategies, the authors provide a guide for managing the tensions between medical technology and human autonomy.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Professionals in the field identify this work as a practical resource for integrating ethical theory into daily clinical practice. Readers frequently note the balance between academic rigor and the actionable advice provided for navigating sensitive end-of-life negotiations.
Page Count:
280
Publication Date:
2006-07-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190615745
ISBN-13:
9780190615741
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