05039nam 2200745I 450 991045695870332120181112152951.00-429-90694-30-429-48217-51-283-07057-X97866130705791-84940-645-6(CKB)2550000000033554(EBL)690173(OCoLC)723944604(SSID)ssj0000523609(PQKBManifestationID)11325964(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000523609(PQKBWorkID)10543309(PQKB)10791307(MiAaPQ)EBC690173(Au-PeEL)EBL690173(CaPaEBR)ebr10463855(CaONFJC)MIL307057(OCoLC)727948476(FlBoTFG)9780429482175(EXLCZ)99255000000003355420181112h20182008 uy 0engur||| |||||txtccrThe Janus Face of Prenatal Diagnostics A European Study Bridging Ethics, Psychoanalysis, and Medicine /by Eve-Marie EngelsFirst edition.Boca Raton, FL :Routledge,[2018].©2008.1 online resource (637 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-367-32809-7 1-85575-674-9 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; Copy Right; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; ABOUT THE EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS; PREFACE; PART I: INTRODUCTION; CHAPTER ONE: Introduction and overview; CHAPTER TWO: Ethics of care in prenatal diagnosis: implications of variations in law, policy, and practice in EDIG countries; CHAPTER THREE: State of the art in prenatal diagnosis; PART II: FINDINGS OF EDIG; CHAPTER FOUR: Empirical data evaluation on EDIG (Ethical Dilemmas due to Prenatal and Genetic Diagnostics); CHAPTER FIVE: Some comments of countries that collected empirical and clinical dataCHAPTER SIX: Interviewing women and couples after prenatal and genetic diagnosticsCHAPTER SEVEN: Crisis intervention after prenatal diagnostics: an example; CHAPTER EIGHT: ""I'd also like to be in good hope myself for once."" The highly problematic decision-making process within the framework of PND and its dependency on a sufficiently developed, autonomous female identity; PART III: ETHICAL CONSIDERATIONS ABOUT EDIG; CHAPTER NINE: Experience and ethics: ethical and methodological reflections on the integration of the EDIG study in the ethical landscapeCHAPTER TEN: Moral dilemmas and decision-making in prenatal genetic testingCHAPTER ELEVEN: The moral status of the foetus; CHAPTER TWELVE: Prenatal genetic counselling: conceptual and ethical issues; CHAPTER THIRTEEN: The interchange between psychoanalysis and philosophy in the understanding of ethical decisions; PART IV: CLINICAL, MEDICAL, AND SOCIETAL IMPLICATIONS; CHAPTER FOURTEEN: A model of integrated genetic counselling (IGC): EDIG as a transformation promoter in PNDCHAPTER FIFTEEN: Prenatal and genetic diagnostics and trisomia: a current debate of ethical and psychosocial implications with reference to GreeceCHAPTER SIXTEEN: PND in a Christian and Muslim culture. The EDIG project in Thrace, Greece; CHAPTER SEVENTEEN: Introducing new tests in genetic diagnostics: details of some ongoing controversial discussions in Swedish media; BIBLIOGRAPHYCoping with modern technology in the life sciences (biology and medicine) became a major issue for people living in the Twentieth Century, and continues to be so in the present century. Biotechnology creates new opportunities and possibilities, but also new dangers, risks, and ethical concerns. In this volume, ethical dilemmas in the context of a specific biomedical technology are discussed. Experts in ethics, philosophy, psychoanalysis, and medicine jointly investigated a field of prenatal and genetic research that seems particularly challenging: prenatal diagnostics. The new and innovative interdisciplinary dialogue on this topic that is presented in this volume offers a deeper understanding of the ethical dilemmas raised by prenatal and genetic diagnostics, and explores ways to support couples in this extremely difficult situation.Prenatal diagnosisMoral and ethical aspectsFetusAbnormalitiesDiagnosisGenetic screeningMoral and ethical aspectsMedical ethicsElectronic books.Prenatal diagnosisMoral and ethical aspects.FetusAbnormalitiesDiagnosis.Genetic screeningMoral and ethical aspects.Medical ethics.174.2618.32042Engels Eve-Marie615010FlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK9910456958703321The Janus Face of Prenatal Diagnostics1896508UNINA