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CHF109.60
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The first book to apply Robert Brandom's pragmatist philosophy of language to make explicit the normative dimensions of genetic counselling The only book on genetic counseling that explores how communication affects professional conceptions of providing genetic information Features a distinctive focus on how best to coordinate meanings across genetic and religious discourses
Auteur
Joseph B. Fanning is Assistant Professor of Medicine in the Center for Biomedical Ethics and Society at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. He serves as the Director of the Clinical Ethics Consultation Service and works with patients, families and clinicians on ethical concerns that arise in health care.
He received undergraduate training at Birmingham-Southern College (B.A. 1993) completed masters work at Princeton Theological Seminary (M.Div., 2000, Th.M., 2001); and earned his doctorate in the Graduate Department of Religion at Vanderbilt University (Ph.D. 2008).
His research focuses on the role of communication and interpersonal skills in the development of therapeutic relationships across clinical contexts. Most recently, he and other members of a research team authored an article in Qualitative Health Research identifying obstacles to sharing expectations in a critical care context. He has co-authored a book based on fifty-five patient interviews titled, What Patients Teach: The Everyday Ethics of Healthcare (Oxford University Press, Fall 2013). In 2009, Fanning co-edited with Dr. Ellen Wright Clayton a special issue of the American Journal of Medical Genetics that focused on spiritual and religious issues in medical genetics.
Fanning also teaches healthcare ethics across Vanderbilt working with students in the schools of Medicine and Nursing as well as with trainees across multiple residency and fellowship programs. He is also the lead instructor for undergraduate course in the College of Arts and Science titled Death and Dying in America that combines experiential learning through hospice volunteering with interdisciplinary engagement of the issues that surround death and dying.
Contenu
LIST OF TABLES.- INTRODUCTION.- Methodology and Terminology.- Debbie's Case.- Mapping the Project.- Chapters; I. GENETIC COUNSELING: MODELS AND VISIONS.- Teaching and Psychotherapeutic Models of Genetic Counseling.- Spiritualist Tradition.- A Technical Vision of Communication.- Theses of the Technical Vision.- The Technical Vision and the Teaching Model of Genetic Counseling.- Evaluation.- A Therapeutic Vision of Communication.- Theses of the Therapeutic Vision.- The Therapeutic Vision and Psychotherapeutic Model of Genetic Counseling.- Evaluation.- Summary.- II. A RESPONSIBILITY MODEL OF GENETIC COUNSELING.- Responsibility Model.- Embodiment Tradition of Communication.- A Pragmatic Theory of Communication.- What is communication?.- What is meaning?.- Underwriting the Responsibility Model.- Summary.- III. GENETIC COUNSELING AND NONDIRECTIVENESS.- A Brief History of Nondirectiveness.- Nondirectiveness and the Teaching Model.- Nondirectiveness and the.- Psychotherapeutic Model.- Nondirectiveness and the Responsibility Model.- Evaluation of Models: Debbie's Case.- Summary.- IV. GENETIC COUNSELING AND SPIRITUAL ASSESSMENT.- Spiritual Assessment in Genetic Counseling.- Defining Spirituality.- Initial Motivations for Spiritual Assessment.- Explorations of Spiritual Assessment in Genetic Counseling.- HOPE Approach.- CEGRM.- Evaluation of Harms and Benefits.- Spiritual Assessment and Debbie's Case.- Teaching Model.- Psychotherapeutic Model.- Responsibility Model.- Summary.- CONCLUSION.- Implications.- Genetic Counseling and Professional Communication.- Medicine and Spirituality.- APPENDIX.- BIBLIOGRAPHY.