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Caring : nurses, women, and ethics / Helga Kuhse.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Oxford, OX, UK ; Maldon, MA, USA : Blackwell Publishers, 1997.Description: xi, 296 p. ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0631202102 (hbk. : alk. paper)
  • 0631202110 (pbk. : alk. paper)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 610.73 20 K.H.C
Contents:
Two Nurses -- A History of Subservience -- Metaphors and Nursing -- The Pre-Nightingale Period -- The Nightingale Period -- Metaphors of Subservience -- Raised from the Sink -- Advocacy or Subservience for the Sake of Patients? -- A Change in Metaphor -- Nursing--a Naturally Subservient Profession? -- Subservience for the Sake of Life or Limb? -- Professional Experts are not Ethical Experts -- Do Patients Need Subservient Mother Surrogates? -- Ethics -- Ethics is Not... -- Minimally Ethics is... -- The Minimum Conception of Ethics -- Women and Ethics: Is Morality Gendered? -- Female Virtues and Male Reason? -- Carol Gilligan and the Ethics of Care -- Do Women Speak in a Different Voice? -- Nature or Nurture? -- Care versus Justice: An Old Debate in New Clothes? -- The Care Critique of Traditional Ethics -- The Critique of Principles and Rules -- The Critique of Impartialism -- Why Partialism Cannot Replace Impartialism -- Care versus Justice--Not a Matter of Gender -- 'Yes' to Caring--But 'No' to a Nursing Ethics of Care -- Care -- What Kind of Nurse--Patient Relationship? -- The Importance of Dispositional Care -- Care is Not Sufficient: A Critique of Noddings -- The Object of Nursing Care -- Care Knows No Limits, No Fairness and Equality -- Silenced by Care -- Conclusion: The Same Old Tune, Sung Upside Down? -- Just Caring at the End of Life -- Caring at the End of Life -- Medical End-of-Life Decisions: The Traditional View -- Rejecting the Traditional View for the Sake of Care -- Some Objections
Summary: "This book is provocative and a ′must′ for all nurses who are or ought to be engaged in nurse ethics." Ulla Fasting, Nursing Ethics Kuhse′s book is a contribution to the professionalization of the nurses and contributes also to the improvement of the ethical discourses regarding end–of–life discussions in clinical care." Marieke Janssen, Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy This volume provides a critical introduction to contemporary attempts to base nursing ethics on a feminine "ethics of care". At the heart of this book is a philosophical and practical examination of what has come to be known as the "justice versus care" debate. The ′care′ approach, Kuhse argues, is dangerous and may perpetuate the moral disenfranchisement of women and nurses. In advancing a conception of "just caring", the author suggests a decision–making framework in which nurses play a central role. In such a framework the terminally ill would not only be able to refuse treatment, but would also be able to receive direct help in dying. It provides essential reading to students of ethics, nursing and feminist philosophy.
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Includes bibliographical references (p. [263]-285) and index.

Two Nurses --
A History of Subservience --
Metaphors and Nursing --
The Pre-Nightingale Period --
The Nightingale Period --
Metaphors of Subservience --
Raised from the Sink --
Advocacy or Subservience for the Sake of Patients? --
A Change in Metaphor --
Nursing--a Naturally Subservient Profession? --
Subservience for the Sake of Life or Limb? --
Professional Experts are not Ethical Experts --
Do Patients Need Subservient Mother Surrogates? --
Ethics --
Ethics is Not... --
Minimally Ethics is... --
The Minimum Conception of Ethics --
Women and Ethics: Is Morality Gendered? --
Female Virtues and Male Reason? --
Carol Gilligan and the Ethics of Care --
Do Women Speak in a Different Voice? --
Nature or Nurture? --
Care versus Justice: An Old Debate in New Clothes? --
The Care Critique of Traditional Ethics --
The Critique of Principles and Rules --
The Critique of Impartialism --
Why Partialism Cannot Replace Impartialism --
Care versus Justice--Not a Matter of Gender --
'Yes' to Caring--But 'No' to a Nursing Ethics of Care --
Care --
What Kind of Nurse--Patient Relationship? --
The Importance of Dispositional Care --
Care is Not Sufficient: A Critique of Noddings --
The Object of Nursing Care --
Care Knows No Limits, No Fairness and Equality --
Silenced by Care --
Conclusion: The Same Old Tune, Sung Upside Down? --
Just Caring at the End of Life --
Caring at the End of Life --
Medical End-of-Life Decisions: The Traditional View --
Rejecting the Traditional View for the Sake of Care --
Some Objections

"This book is provocative and a ′must′ for all nurses who are or ought to be engaged in nurse ethics." Ulla Fasting, Nursing Ethics Kuhse′s book is a contribution to the professionalization of the nurses and contributes also to the improvement of the ethical discourses regarding end–of–life discussions in clinical care." Marieke Janssen, Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy
This volume provides a critical introduction to contemporary attempts to base nursing ethics on a feminine "ethics of care".
At the heart of this book is a philosophical and practical examination of what has come to be known as the "justice versus care" debate. The ′care′ approach, Kuhse argues, is dangerous and may perpetuate the moral disenfranchisement of women and nurses. In advancing a conception of "just caring", the author suggests a decision–making framework in which nurses play a central role. In such a framework the terminally ill would not only be able to refuse treatment, but would also be able to receive direct help in dying.
It provides essential reading to students of ethics, nursing and feminist philosophy.

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