Literature DB >> 22143675

Normativity unbound: liminality in palliative care ethics.

Hillel Braude1.   

Abstract

This article applies the anthropological concept of liminality to reconceptualize palliative care ethics. Liminality possesses both spatial and temporal dimensions. Both these aspects are analyzed to provide insight into the intersubjective relationship between patient and caregiver in the context of palliative care. Aristotelian practical wisdom, or phronesis, is considered to be the appropriate model for palliative care ethics, provided it is able to account for liminality. Moreover, this article argues for the importance of liminality for providing an ethical structure that grounds the doctrine of double effect and overcomes the impasse of phronesis in the treatment of the terminally ill.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22143675     DOI: 10.1007/s11017-011-9200-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth        ISSN: 1386-7415


  27 in total

Review 1.  Analgesia, virtue, and the principle of double effect.

Authors:  L A Hawryluck; W R Harvey
Journal:  J Palliat Care       Date:  2000-10       Impact factor: 2.250

2.  The living model: an Australian model for aboriginal palliative care service delivery with international implications.

Authors:  Pam McGrath
Journal:  J Palliat Care       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 2.250

3.  The syringe driver and the subcutaneous route in palliative care: the inventor, the history and the implications.

Authors:  Fiona Graham; David Clark
Journal:  J Pain Symptom Manage       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 3.612

4.  Palliative care without borders.

Authors:  David J Roy
Journal:  J Palliat Care       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 2.250

Review 5.  Palliative care as an international human right.

Authors:  Frank Brennan
Journal:  J Pain Symptom Manage       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 3.612

6.  Catastrophe and caregiving: the failure of medicine as an art.

Authors:  Arthur Kleinman
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2008-01-05       Impact factor: 79.321

7.  Sickness as cultural performance: drama, trajectory, and pilgrimage root metaphors and the making social of disease.

Authors:  R Frankenberg
Journal:  Int J Health Serv       Date:  1986       Impact factor: 1.663

8.  Who is entitled to double effect?

Authors:  J Boyle
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1991-10

9.  La frontera: responsibly managing borders and boundaries in clinical ethics.

Authors:  Laurence B McCullough
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  2009-12-21

Review 10.  The birth of tragedy in pediatrics: a phronetic conception of bioethics.

Authors:  Franco A Carnevale
Journal:  Nurs Ethics       Date:  2007-09       Impact factor: 2.874

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  1 in total

1.  Muslim physicians and palliative care: attitudes towards the use of palliative sedation.

Authors:  George Muishout; Hanneke W M van Laarhoven; Gerard Wiegers; Ulrike Popp-Baier
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2018-05-08       Impact factor: 3.603

  1 in total

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