China: Bioethics, Trust, and the Challenge of the Market

J. Tao Lai Po-wah (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
212 Seiten
2008
Springer-Verlag New York Inc.
978-1-4020-6756-3 (ISBN)

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China: Bioethics, Trust, and the Challenge of the Market -
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Hinkley 1 Taking Finitude Seriously in a Chinese Cultural Context Across the world, health care policy is a moral and political challenge. In countries such as China, there are in addition stark regional differences in the quality and availability of health care, posing additional challenges to public policy-making.
to the Moral Challenges H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr. and Aaron E. Hinkley 1 Taking Finitude Seriously in a Chinese Cultural Context Across the world, health care policy is a moral and political challenge. Few want to die young or to suffer, yet not all the money in the world can deliver physical immortality or a life free of suffering. In addition, health care needs differ. As a result, unless a state coercively forbids those with the desire and means to buy better basic health care to do so, access to medicine will be unequal. No co- try can afford to provide all with the best of care. In countries such as China, there are in addition stark regional differences in the quality and availability of health care, posing additional challenges to public policy-making. Further, in China as elsewhere, the desire to lower morbidity and mortality risks has led to ever more resources being invested in health care. When such investment is supported primarily by funds derived from taxation, an increasing burden is placed on a country’s economy. This is particularly the case as in China with its one-child policy, where the proportion of the elderly population consuming health care is rising. Thesepolicychallengesarecompoundedbymoraldiversity. Defacto,humansdo not share one morality. Instead, they rank cardinal human goods and right-making conditions in different orders, often not sharing an af?rmation of the same goods or views of the right.

Introduction: Trust, the Market, and Bioethics.- The Bioethics of Trust.- Chinese Health Care Policy: An Introduction to the Moral Challenges.- Health Care Policy in China.- Towards a Confucian Approach to Health Care Allocation in China: A Dynamic Geography.- Trust is the Core of the Doctor–Patient Relationship: From the Perspective of Traditional Chinese Medical Ethics.- Medical Resources, the Market, and the Development of Private-Run Hospitals in China.- China, Beware: What American Health Care Has to Learn from Singapore.- Trust, Profit, Scarcity, and Integrity: Confucian Thought and Traditional Morality.- Confucian Trust, Market and Health Care Reform.- The Pursuit of an Efficient, Sustainable Health Care System in China.- A Reconstructionist Confucian Approach to Chinese Health Care.- The Market and Health Care.- Health Care Services, Markets, and the Confucian Moral Tradition: Establishing a Humanistic Health Care Market.- Markets, Trust, and the Nurturing of a Culture of Responsibility: Implications for Health Care Policy in China.- Fostering Professional Virtue in the Market: Reflections on the Challenges Facing Chinese Health Care Reform.- Looking to the Future of China: Can Confucius Guide the Health Care Market?.- On the Reform of Health Care Reform.- Is Singapore’s Healthcare System Morally Problematic?.

Reihe/Serie Asian Studies in Bioethics and the Philosophy of Medicine
Philosophy and Medicine ; 96
Zusatzinfo XII, 212 p.
Verlagsort New York, NY
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 235 mm
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie
Medizin / Pharmazie Allgemeines / Lexika
Medizin / Pharmazie Medizinische Fachgebiete Medizinethik
Naturwissenschaften
ISBN-10 1-4020-6756-9 / 1402067569
ISBN-13 978-1-4020-6756-3 / 9781402067563
Zustand Neuware
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