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      Bioethics, Religion, and Public Policy: Intersections, Interactions, and Solutions.

      1
      Journal of religion and health
      Springer Nature
      Bioethics, Brain death, Counter-narrative, Jahi McMath, Jewish law, Vaccination

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          Abstract

          Bioethics in America positions itself as a totalizing discipline, capable of providing guidance to any individual within the boundaries of a health or medical setting. Yet the religiously observant or those driven by spiritual values have not universally accepted decisions made by "secular" bioethics, and as a result, religious bioethical thinkers and adherents have developed frameworks and rich counter-narratives used to fend off encroachment by policies perceived as threatening. This article uses brain death in Jewish law, the case of Jahi McMath, and vaccination refusal to observe how the religious system of ethics is presently excluded from bioethics and its implications.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Relig Health
          Journal of religion and health
          Springer Nature
          1573-6571
          0022-4197
          Oct 2016
          : 55
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Albert Einstein College of Medicine, 1300 Morris Park Ave, Bronx, NY, 10461, USA. peter.kahn@med.einstein.yu.edu.
          Article
          10.1007/s10943-015-0144-0
          10.1007/s10943-015-0144-0
          26525211
          0cda12d5-67c5-4ad5-aa44-9b0e12b7fc5b
          History

          Bioethics,Brain death,Counter-narrative,Jahi McMath,Jewish law,Vaccination

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