Bioethics for Clinicians
This series is intended to elucidate key concepts in bioethics and to help clinicians to integrate bioethical knowledge into daily practice. These articles are written by scholars in medicine, ethics and law.
The cases in the Bioethics for clinicians series reflect the authors' experience and are not intended to refer to any particular case.
Editorial introducing the original series
- Consent
- Disclosure
- Capacity
- Voluntariness
- Substitute decision-making
- Advance care planning
- Truth telling
- Confidentiality
- Involving children in medical decisions
- Research ethics
- Euthanasia and assisted suicide
- Ethical dilemmas that arise in the care of
pregnant women: rethinking "maternal-fetal conflicts"
- Resource allocation
- Ethics and genetics in medicine
- Quality end-of-life care
- Dealing with demands for inappropriate treatment
- Conflict of interest in research, education and patient care
- Aboriginal cultures
- Hinduism and Sikhism
- Chinese bioethics
- Islamic bioethics
- Jewish bioethics
- Disclosure of medical error
- Brain death
- Teaching bioethics in the clinical setting
- Assisted reproductive technologies
- Catholic bioethics
- Protestant bioethics
See also Bioethics for clinicians series |