Part I: The Development of a Health Care Decision-Making Model for
Children
1: Introduction
2: A Limited Theory of the Family
3: Constrained Parental Autonomy
4: Respect for the Competent Child
Part II: Applications of Constrained Parental Autonomy
5: The Child as Research Subject
6: The Child as Organ Donor
7: The Child as Patient
8: The Sexually Active Adolescent
9: Conclusion
Bibliography; Index
Lainie Friedman Ross, MD, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the
Department of Pediatrics and Medicine, and Assistant Director of
the MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, at the University
of Chicago. After taking her medical degree from the University of
Pennsylvania, and doing her residency in children's and babies'
hospitals in Philadelphia and New York City, she took a doctorate
in philosophy from the University of Yale. She has been on the
faculty at
the University of Chicago since 1994.
`worth reading, worth discussing and .. worth prescribing for
students of children's rights, medical law and bioethics.'
The International Journal of Children's Rights 8
`This is an important book. The issues it raise will not go away.
The book is an invigorating read.'
The International Journal of Children's Rights 8
`a valuable contribution to the debates. It certainly should be
read by everyone interested in children's rights.'
The International Journal of Children's Rights 8
`Review from previous edition There is much in this book that
should provide material for lively discussion and debate about who
ought to have authority to make health care decisions for children
and how far this authority extends... the balance of theory and
application in the book ought to make it interesting reading for
bioethicists and health professionals alike.'
Jeffrey Blustein, Bioethics.
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