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Ethical and legal debates in Irish healthcare

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This is an in-depth study of the contentious issues in Irish healthcare and deals with issues such as assisted suicide, abortion, adolescent treatment refusal, end of life care, retention of biolog...
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  • 01 February 2016
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The Irish health system is confronted by a range of challenges, both emerging and recurring. This collection provides a foundation for ongoing engagement with selected issues in contemporary Irish health contexts. It includes contributions from scholars and practitioners across a range of disciplines. The essays are theoretically informed and are grounded in the realities of the Irish health system, by drawing on contributors’ contextual knowledge.

The focus of the collection is interdisciplinary and the essays are situated at the intersection between ethics, law, medicine and policy. It draws out the interlinking themes of context and care, rights and responsibilities, regulating research and oversight of decision-making.

This book makes an informed and balanced contribution to academic and broader public discourse. It will be of interest to academics and postgraduate students in ethics, law and health and those outside the academic sphere who must engage critically with the issues addressed.

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Price: £90.00
Pages: 272
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Irish Society
Publication Date: 01 February 2016
ISBN: 9780719099465
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Disease & Health Issues, Social law and Medical law, Medical and healthcare law, Health, illness and addiction: social aspects

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Mary Donnelly is Professor of Law at University College Cork

Claire Murray is Lecturer in Law at University College Cork

Introduction – Mary Donnelly and Claire Murray
Part I: Context and Care
1. Reproductive justice in Ireland: A feminist analysis of the Neary and Halappanavar cases – Joan McCarthy
2. Conscientious objection, harm reduction and abortion care – Ruth Fletcher
3. Why care about carers? – Claire Murray
Part II: Rights and Responsibilities
4. The limits of autonomy: an exploration of the role of autonomy in the debate about assisted suicide – Louise Campbell
5. If she can consent, why can’t she refuse? – Tom Walker
6. Patient autonomy and responsibilities within the patient-doctor partnership: two sides of the same unequal coin? – Asim Sheikh
7. Older people, human rights, law and policy – Mary Keys
8. Legal and ethical considerations in involuntary admission to long-term care – Shaun O’Keeffe
Part III: Regulating Research
9. Retention and use of human biological samples: The Guthrie card example – Deirdre Madden
10. A moral gap?: Examining Ireland’s failure to regulate embryonic stem cell research – Ciara Staunton
11. Children in clinical trials in Ireland: Addressing the gaps in the legal framework – Katherine Wade
Part IV: Oversight of decision-making
12. Governance failures and organisational ethics: Perspectives from the Neary and Halappanavar cases – Heike Felzmann
13. Psychiatric Admission in Ireland: The Role of Country of Origin – Brendan Kelly
14. The relationship between the courts and mental health tribunals – Darius Whelan
15. Patient-centred dying: the role of law – Mary Donnelly
16. Improving end-of-life care in intensive care units – Barry Lyons
Index