The Family, Medical Decision-Making, and Biotechnology Critical Reflections on Asian Moral Perspectives

East Asian medicine, biomedical research, and health care policy are framed by their own set of moral and cultural commitments. Chief among these is the influence of Confucian ideas. A rich portrayal is offered of the implications of Confucian moral and ontological understandings for medical decisio...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Lee, Shui Chuen (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 2007, 2007
Edition:1st ed. 2007
Series:Philosophy and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:
Collection: Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa
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505 0 |a Medicine and the Biomedical Technologies in the Context of Asian Perspectives -- Confucian Familism and its Bioethical Implications -- The Family in Transition and in Authority -- Family Life, Bioethics and Confucianism -- The Moral Ground of Truth Telling Guideline Development -- Truth Telling to the Sick and Dying in a Traditional Chinese Culture -- On Relational Autonomy -- Regulating sex selection in a patriarchal society -- Modern Biotechnology and the Postmodern Family -- The Ethics of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research and the Interests of the Family -- A Confucian Evaluation of Embryonic Stem Cell Research and the Moral Status of Human Embryos -- Regulations for Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research in East Asian Countries -- Stem Cell Research -- Why Western Culture, Unlike Confucian Culture, Is so Concerned About Embryonic Stem Cell Research -- Confucian Healthcare System in Singapore -- Respect for the Elderly and Family Responsibility -- Is Singapore's Health Care System Congruent with Confucianism? 
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520 |a East Asian medicine, biomedical research, and health care policy are framed by their own set of moral and cultural commitments. Chief among these is the influence of Confucian ideas. A rich portrayal is offered of the implications of Confucian moral and ontological understandings for medical decision-making, human embryonic stem cell research, and health care financing. What is offered is a multifaceted insight into what distinguishes East Asian bioethical reflections. This volume opens with an exploration of the Confucian recognition of the family as an entity existing in its own right and which is not reducible to its members or their interests. As the essays in this volume show, this recognition of the family supports a notion of family autonomy that contrasts with Western individualistic accounts of proper medical decision-making. There are analyses of basic concepts as well as explorations of their implications for actual medical practice. The conflicts in East Asian countries between traditional Confucian and Western bioethics are explored as well as the tension between the new reproductive technologies and traditional understandings of the family. The studies of East Asian reflections concerning the moral status of human embryos and the morality of human embryo stem cell research disclose a set of concerns quite different from those anchored in Christian and Muslim cultural perspectives. The volume closes with an exploration of how Confucian cultural resources can be drawn upon to meet the contemporary challenges of health care financing