TitleCompetency [electronic resource] : A Study of Informal Competency Determinations in Primary Care / edited by Mary Ann Gardell Cutter, Earl E. Shelp
ImprintDordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1991
Connect tohttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-3614-3
Descript XIX, 290 p. online resource

SUMMARY

Some conferences produce proceedings, others an inspiration to labor, which finally leads to a published work. Such has been the case with regard to this volume. In 1984, the Center for Ethics, Medicine, and Public Issues held a conference with the title 'When are Competent Patients Incompetent?' with the support of the Texas Committee for the Humanities, a state-based program of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Assistance was provided by both Baylor College of Medicine and the Institute of Religion. This conference evoked a conยญ siderable interest in examining further the moral status of competency determinations in the clinical setting. This interest is realized in this volume, which now affords us an opportunity to thank all those individยญ uals who made the conference possible, only some of whom are acknowledged in this Preface. In particular, we wish to express our gratitude to Baruch A. Brody, Rebecca Dresser, the Honorable Jerome Jones, H. Steven Moffic, Margery W. Shaw, Eleanor Tinsley, and Albert Van HeIden. The volume took its shape through the labors of Earl Shelp and Mary Ann Gardell Cutter, who inspired the further evolution of the papers presented at the conference and attracted contributions from individuals who had not attended. Earl Shelp and Mary Ann Gardell Cutter have produced a volume following extensive reflection and dialogue; they were ably assisted in the final preparation of the manuยญ script by Thomas J. Bole III and George Khushf, to whom special thanks are due


CONTENT

I / The Clinical Context -- Judging Competence: When the Psychiatrist Need, or Need Not, Be Involved -- Informal Judgments of Competence and Incompetence -- II / Reexamining Concepts of Competence -- Competence -- Judgments of Incompetence and Their Moral Presuppositions -- III/Fashioning Law and Public Policy -- Competence: At the Intersection of Law, Medicine, and Philosophy -- The Geography of Competency -- Medical Treatment Decisions and Competency in the Eyes of the Law: A Brief Survey -- IV / Case Studies: Seeking Insight From Application -- Competency Judgments: Case Studies From the Internistโs Perspective -- Competency Judgments: Case Studies from the Psychiatristโ Perspective -- Competency Judgments: Case Studies in Moral Perspective -- V / Commentary and Critique: Another Look at Concepts of Competence -- The Competency of Definitions of Competency -- Judgments About Patient Competence: Cultural and Economic Antecedents -- Patient Freedom and Competence in Health Care -- Breaking up the Shell Game of Consequentialism: Incompetence โ Concept and Ethics -- Competency: A Triaxial Concept -- Notes On Contributors


SUBJECT

  1. Philosophy
  2. Medicine -- Philosophy
  3. Psychiatry
  4. Medical ethics
  5. Philosophy
  6. Philosophy of Medicine
  7. Psychiatry
  8. Theory of Medicine/Bioethics