Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice and the Common Good
Herausgeber: Beers, Britta van; Dickenson, Donna; Sterckx, Sigrid
Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice and the Common Good
Herausgeber: Beers, Britta van; Dickenson, Donna; Sterckx, Sigrid
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Asks whether personalised medicine is superior to 'one-size-fits-all' treatment. Does it elevate individual choice above the common good?
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Asks whether personalised medicine is superior to 'one-size-fits-all' treatment. Does it elevate individual choice above the common good?
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Januar 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 577g
- ISBN-13: 9781108473910
- ISBN-10: 1108473911
- Artikelnr.: 52960197
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Januar 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 156mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 577g
- ISBN-13: 9781108473910
- ISBN-10: 1108473911
- Artikelnr.: 52960197
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
1. Introduction to Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice and the Common
Good Donna Dickenson, Britta van Beers and Sigrid Sterckx; 2. Personalised
medicine and the politics of human nuclear genome transfer Françoise Baylis
and Alana Cattapan; 3. Stem cell derived gametes and uterus transplants:
hurray for the end of third party reproduction! Or not? Heidi Mertes; 4.
Personalising future health risk through 'biological insurance':
proliferation of private umbilical cord blood banking in India Jyotsna
Gupta; 5. Combating the trade in organs: why we should preserve the
communal nature of organ transplantation Kristof Van Assche; 6. When there
is no cure: challenges for collective approaches to Alzheimer's disease
Robin Pierce; 7. Lost and found: relocating the individual in the age of
intensified data sourcing in European healthcare Klaus Hoeyer; 8. Presuming
the promotion of the common good by large-scale health research: the cases
of care.data 2.0 and the 100,000 Genomes Project in the UK Sigrid Sterckx,
Sandi Dheensa and Julian Cockbain; 9. My genome, my right Stuart Hogarth,
Julian Cockbain and Sigrid Sterckx; 10. 'The best me I can possibly be':
legal subjectivity, self-authorship and wrongful life actions in an age of
'genomic torts' Britta van Beers; 11. I run, you run, we run: a
philosophical approach to health and fitness apps Marli Huijer and
Christian Detweiler; 12. The molecularised me: psychoanalysing personalised
medicine and self-tracking Hub Zwart.
Good Donna Dickenson, Britta van Beers and Sigrid Sterckx; 2. Personalised
medicine and the politics of human nuclear genome transfer Françoise Baylis
and Alana Cattapan; 3. Stem cell derived gametes and uterus transplants:
hurray for the end of third party reproduction! Or not? Heidi Mertes; 4.
Personalising future health risk through 'biological insurance':
proliferation of private umbilical cord blood banking in India Jyotsna
Gupta; 5. Combating the trade in organs: why we should preserve the
communal nature of organ transplantation Kristof Van Assche; 6. When there
is no cure: challenges for collective approaches to Alzheimer's disease
Robin Pierce; 7. Lost and found: relocating the individual in the age of
intensified data sourcing in European healthcare Klaus Hoeyer; 8. Presuming
the promotion of the common good by large-scale health research: the cases
of care.data 2.0 and the 100,000 Genomes Project in the UK Sigrid Sterckx,
Sandi Dheensa and Julian Cockbain; 9. My genome, my right Stuart Hogarth,
Julian Cockbain and Sigrid Sterckx; 10. 'The best me I can possibly be':
legal subjectivity, self-authorship and wrongful life actions in an age of
'genomic torts' Britta van Beers; 11. I run, you run, we run: a
philosophical approach to health and fitness apps Marli Huijer and
Christian Detweiler; 12. The molecularised me: psychoanalysing personalised
medicine and self-tracking Hub Zwart.
1. Introduction to Personalised Medicine, Individual Choice and the Common
Good Donna Dickenson, Britta van Beers and Sigrid Sterckx; 2. Personalised
medicine and the politics of human nuclear genome transfer Françoise Baylis
and Alana Cattapan; 3. Stem cell derived gametes and uterus transplants:
hurray for the end of third party reproduction! Or not? Heidi Mertes; 4.
Personalising future health risk through 'biological insurance':
proliferation of private umbilical cord blood banking in India Jyotsna
Gupta; 5. Combating the trade in organs: why we should preserve the
communal nature of organ transplantation Kristof Van Assche; 6. When there
is no cure: challenges for collective approaches to Alzheimer's disease
Robin Pierce; 7. Lost and found: relocating the individual in the age of
intensified data sourcing in European healthcare Klaus Hoeyer; 8. Presuming
the promotion of the common good by large-scale health research: the cases
of care.data 2.0 and the 100,000 Genomes Project in the UK Sigrid Sterckx,
Sandi Dheensa and Julian Cockbain; 9. My genome, my right Stuart Hogarth,
Julian Cockbain and Sigrid Sterckx; 10. 'The best me I can possibly be':
legal subjectivity, self-authorship and wrongful life actions in an age of
'genomic torts' Britta van Beers; 11. I run, you run, we run: a
philosophical approach to health and fitness apps Marli Huijer and
Christian Detweiler; 12. The molecularised me: psychoanalysing personalised
medicine and self-tracking Hub Zwart.
Good Donna Dickenson, Britta van Beers and Sigrid Sterckx; 2. Personalised
medicine and the politics of human nuclear genome transfer Françoise Baylis
and Alana Cattapan; 3. Stem cell derived gametes and uterus transplants:
hurray for the end of third party reproduction! Or not? Heidi Mertes; 4.
Personalising future health risk through 'biological insurance':
proliferation of private umbilical cord blood banking in India Jyotsna
Gupta; 5. Combating the trade in organs: why we should preserve the
communal nature of organ transplantation Kristof Van Assche; 6. When there
is no cure: challenges for collective approaches to Alzheimer's disease
Robin Pierce; 7. Lost and found: relocating the individual in the age of
intensified data sourcing in European healthcare Klaus Hoeyer; 8. Presuming
the promotion of the common good by large-scale health research: the cases
of care.data 2.0 and the 100,000 Genomes Project in the UK Sigrid Sterckx,
Sandi Dheensa and Julian Cockbain; 9. My genome, my right Stuart Hogarth,
Julian Cockbain and Sigrid Sterckx; 10. 'The best me I can possibly be':
legal subjectivity, self-authorship and wrongful life actions in an age of
'genomic torts' Britta van Beers; 11. I run, you run, we run: a
philosophical approach to health and fitness apps Marli Huijer and
Christian Detweiler; 12. The molecularised me: psychoanalysing personalised
medicine and self-tracking Hub Zwart.