Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Allocating organs: the US approach

Series
From Conscience to Robots: Practical Ethics Workshops
Audio Embed
Practical medical ethics symposium: Rationing responsibly in an age of austerity.
Health professionals face ever expanding possibilities for medical treatment, increasing patient expectations and at the same time intense pressures to reduce healthcare costs. This leads frequently to conflicts between obligations to current patients, and others who might benefit from treatment. Is it ethical for doctors and other health professionals to engage in bedside rationing? What ethical principles should guide decisions (for example about which patients to offer intensive care admission or surgery)? Is it discriminatory to take into account disability in allocating resources? If patients are responsible for their illness, should that lead to a lower priority for treatment? In this seminar philosophers from the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics will explore and shed light on the profound ethical challenges around allocating limited health care resources.

More in this series

View Series
From Conscience to Robots: Practical Ethics Workshops

Cost-equivalence: rethinking treatment allocation

Practical medical ethics symposium: Rationing responsibly in an age of austerity
Previous
From Conscience to Robots: Practical Ethics Workshops

Rationing antibiotics in the face of drug resistance: ethical challenges, principles and pathways

Practical medical ethics symposium: Rationing responsibly in an age of austerity
Next

Episode Information

Series
From Conscience to Robots: Practical Ethics Workshops
People
Thaddeus Mason Pope
Keywords
resource allocation
rationing healthcare
Department: Uehiro Oxford Institute
Date Added: 22/11/2018
Duration: 00:23:08

Subscribe

Apple Podcast Audio Audio RSS Feed

Download

Download Audio

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
'Oxford Podcasts' Twitter Account @oxfordpodcasts | MediaPub Publishing Portal for Oxford Podcast Contributors | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2022 The University of Oxford