The ethical imperative of medical humanities.

The Journal of Medical Humanities
Geoffrey Rees

Abstract

Medical humanities purchases its presence on the medical side of university campuses by adopting as its own the ends of medicine and medical ethics. It even justifies its presence by asserting promotion of those ends as an ethical imperative, most of all to improve the caring in medical care. As unobjectionable, even praiseworthy, as this imperative appears, it actually constrains the possibilities for interpersonal relationship in the context of medical practice. Development of those possibilities requires openness of self to the existentially challenging ethical imperative to care also literally for nothing at all.

References

Jan 12, 2000·The Journal of Cell Biology·K J HarveyD S Ucker
Jul 31, 2007·Perspectives in Biology and Medicine·Ronald A Carson
Dec 7, 2007·The Journal of Medical Humanities·Jeffrey P Bishop
Dec 8, 2007·The Journal of Medical Humanities·Alan PetersenRob Marshall

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Citations

Mar 14, 2014·International Journal of Technology Assessment in Health Care·Jayne TaylorBruce Campbell
Jun 29, 2018·Medical Humanities·Lindsay-Ann Coyle, Sarah Atkinson

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