Health Care Ethics USA
2005 - Vol. 13 No. 3
From the editor...
This is the third issue of the
revised format of the ejournal, Health Care Ethics USA, published by the
recently expanded Catholic Health Ethics Partnership (CHEP). The ejournal will
continue to use the year and number identifiers in continuity with the original
format. The journal is designed to assist ethics committee members and other
health professionals in Catholic health care. And the electronic format is
adopted to facilitate easy and widespread distribution of the ejournal across
different health systems. The new format for the ejournal presents essays of
just 1000 words (previously they were considerably longer) with a brief
executive summary - the new format is designed to make it easier for busy
health professionals to find time for the essays.
The original version of each
issue of Health Care Ethics USA is archived online for CHEP members who
have online access to the current and all of the previous issues at: http://chce.slu.edu/chep.html. After
connecting to "log in to the current issue", the User Name is, hceusa
(lower case only), and the Password is, 2005.
This third issue of the new format for Health Care
Ethics USA contains three essays. The first essay is by John Paul Slosar,
PhD, who is the Director of Ethics at Ascension Health, Saint Louis, Missouri.
His essay discusses "Ethical Issues in Genetic Testing," addressing some
implications of the human genome project for Catholic health care. The second
essay is by John Brehany, PhD, who is the Director of Mission Services and
Ethics at Mercy Medical Center in Sioux City, Iowa. His essay addresses an
increasingly neuralgic issue for Catholic health care organizations: "Health
Charities, Unethical Research and Organizational Integrity." The third essay is
by Rev. Greg Manship, M.Div., PhD(c), who is a senior doctoral student at Saint
Louis University's Center for Health Care Ethics. His essay considers the
patient-physician relationship in terminal care by considering "Hope and the
Ethics of Disclosure for Terminally Ill Cancer Patients." I hope you enjoy the
essays and I look forward to receiving suggestions for topics that we might
address in future issues. For ejournal email, please contact: hceusa@slu.edu
Professor Gerard Magill, PhD
Executive Director & Department Chair
Center for Health Care Ethics, Saint Louis University
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