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POWER, INTEGRITY, AND TRUST IN THE MANAGED PRACTICE OF MEDICINE: LESSONS FROM THE HISTORY OF MEDICAL ETHICS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 August 2002

Laurence B. McCullough
Affiliation:
Center for Medical Ethics and Health Policy, Baylor College of Medicine

Extract

Bioethics as a field began some years before it was finally named in the early 1970s. In many ways, bioethics originated in response to urgent matters of the moment, including the controversy over disconnecting Karen Quinlan's respirator, the egregious paternalism of Donald Cowart's doctors in the famous “Dax” case, the abuse of research subjects in the notorious Tuskegee Syphilis Study, and the need to devise an intellectual framework for the development of federal regulations to protect human subjects of research. The phrase “new and unprecedented” became a common description of the topics and issues to which people who later came to be called “bioethicists” responded. It should come as no surprise that bioethics and its practitioners soon came to the self-understanding that their work was new and unprecedented, much as the innovations of biomedical science and their clinical applications were thought to be.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2002 Social Philosophy and Policy Foundation

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