An incisive examination of bioethics and American healthcare, and their profound affects on American culture over the last sixty years, from two eminent scholars. An eye-opening look at the inevitable moral choices that come along with tremendous medical progress, Everybody Wants to Go to Heaven but Nobody Wants to Die is a primer for all Americans to talk more honestly about health care. Beginning in the 1950s when doctors still paid house calls but regularly withheld the truth from their patients, Amy Gutmann and Jonathan D. Moreno explore an unprecedented revolution in health care and explain the problem with America's wanting everything that medical science has to offer without debating its merits and its limits. The result: Americans today pay far more for health care while having among the lowest life expectancies and highest infant mortality of any affluent nation. Gutmann and Moreno?"incisive, influential, and pragmatic thinkers" (Arthur Caplan)?demonstrate that the stakes have never been higher for prolonging and improving life. From health care reform and death-with-dignity to child vaccinations and gene editing, they explain how bioethics came to dominate the national spotlight, leading and responding to a revolution in doctor-patient relations, a burgeoning world of organ transplants, and new reproductive technologies that benefit millions but create a host of legal and ethical challenges. With striking examples, the authors show how breakthroughs in cancer research, infectious disease, and drug development provide Americans with exciting new alternatives, yet often painful choices. They address head-on the most fundamental challenges in American health care: Why do we pay so much for health care while still lacking universal coverage? How can medical studies adequately protect individuals who volunteer for them? What's fair when it comes to allocating organs for transplants in truly life-and-death situations? A lucid and provocative blend of history and public policy, this urgent work exposes the American paradox of wanting to have it all without paying the price.
Disaster Nationalism : The Downfall of Liberal Civilization
Richard Seymour
audiobookThe Higher Learning in America : A Memorandum on the Conduct of Universities by Business Men
Thorstein Veblen
bookWho Owns This Sentence? : A History of Copyrights and Wrongs
David Bellos, Alexandre Montagu
audiobookDemocracy by Petition
Daniel Carpenter
audiobookA History of American Higher Education
John R. Thelin
audiobookLooking for the Good War
Elizabeth D. Samet
audiobookCommand and Persuade
Peter Baldwin
audiobookResistance from the Right
Lauren Lassabe Shepherd
audiobookFree Enterprise
Lawrence B. Glickman
audiobookBig Fiction : How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature
Dan Sinykin
audiobookHistoire mondiale des riches : Pourquoi ils sont le vrai pouvoir
Fabrice d'Almeida
audiobookL'ancien régime et la révolution
Alexis de Tocqueville
book