Privacy and Health Care

Lieferzeit: Lieferbar innerhalb 14 Tagen

117,69 

Biomedical Ethics Reviews

ISBN: 1617372331
ISBN 13: 9781617372339
Herausgeber: James M Humber/Robert F Almeder
Verlag: Humana Press
Umfang: ix, 190 S., 2 s/w Illustr.
Erscheinungsdatum: 19.11.2010
Auflage: 1/2001
Produktform: Kartoniert
Einband: KT

Although a legal and moral right to privacy is generally recognized in society, there is no agreement regarding how these rights should apply to medical information. In Privacy and Health Care, leading ethical, medical, legal, and philosophical thinkers debate the conflicting moral and legal demands for maintaining the privacy of health care records in an age of easy computer access to those records and growing pressure by insurance companies, public health agencies, and employers for personal health care data. The essays by Boleyn-Fitzgerald, Margo Goldman, and Bill Allen & Ray Moseley favor restrictions being placed upon access to medical information, whereas the chapters by David Korn and Mark Meany argue for the opposing view. An introductory article by Charity Scott delineates the principal legal and ethical issues on the general topic of medical privacy. Interdisciplinary and enlightening, Privacy and Health Care presents the latest moral and legal thinking for and against greater protection of the privacy of health care information, and advances this important issue to a new level of clarity and decision.

Artikelnummer: 988708 Kategorie:

Beschreibung

Western societies generally recognize both a legal and a moral right to privacy. However, at the present time there is no settled opin ion in the United States regarding how these rights should relate to medical information. On the one hand, virtually everyone agrees that one' s medical records should not be open to just any interested person' s inspection. On the other hand, most also agree that some sacrifices in medical privacy are necessary for scientific advancement, public health protection, and other social goals. However, what limits should be set upon those sacrifices, and how those limits should be determined, have long been issues of debate. In recent years this debate has intensified. There are a variety ofreasons for this; to mention only three: (1) Over the years the US health care delivery system has become increasingly complex, and with this complexity there has come a need for more and more people to have access to patients' medical records. With each transference of information, breaches in confidentiality become more likely. (2) Medical costs have risen at an alarming rate. This makes health insurance a virtual necessity for adequate medical care, and people worry that they will be denied employment and/or medical cov erage if certain sorts of medical information are not kept strictly confi dential. (3) Finally, many medical records are now kept in computer files, and the impossibility of guaranteeing confidentiality for files of this sort is a constant worry.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Is Too Much Privacy Bad for Your Health? An Introduction to the Law and Ethics of Medical Privacy Charity Scott An Egalitarian Justification of Medical Privacy Patrick Boleyn-Fitzgerald Medical Privacy in the Information Age: Ethical Issues, Policy Solutions Margo P. Goldman Medical Information Privacy and the Conduct of Biomedical Research David Korn Privacy and Health Insurance: Can Oil and Water Mix? Bill Allen and Ray Moseley Data Mining, Dataveillance, and Medical Information Privacy Mark E. Meaney Promulgation of "Standards for Privacy of Individually Identifiable Health Information: Final Rule" James M. Humber

Autorenporträt

InhaltsangabeIs Too Much Privacy Bad for Your Health? An Introduction to the Law and Ethics of Medical Privacy Charity Scott An Egalitarian Justification of Medical Privacy Patrick Boleyn-Fitzgerald Medical Privacy in the Information Age: Ethical Issues, Policy Solutions Margo P. Goldman Medical Information Privacy and the Conduct of Biomedical Research David Korn Privacy and Health Insurance: Can Oil and Water Mix? Bill Allen and Ray Moseley Data Mining, Dataveillance, and Medical Information Privacy Mark E. Meaney Promulgation of 'Standards for Privacy of Individually Identifiable Health Information: Final Rule' James M. Humber

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen …