ON MIRACLES AND MEDICINE: NEGOTIATING RELIGIOUS VALUES AT THE END OF LIFE

Can American medicine responsibly integrate patients religious beliefs into their end-of-life care? What is the clinical ethics consultants role in this process? In this dissertation, I attempt to answer these questions by investigating the religious, moral, and epistemic values that influence both...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: BIBLER, TREVOR MARK
Other Authors: LARRY CHURCHILL
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: VANDERBILT 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.library.vanderbilt.edu/available/etd-11232014-105409/
Description
Summary:Can American medicine responsibly integrate patients religious beliefs into their end-of-life care? What is the clinical ethics consultants role in this process? In this dissertation, I attempt to answer these questions by investigating the religious, moral, and epistemic values that influence both 1) the commitments of the clinician and 2) the beliefs of the person hoping for a miracle (the invocator). My investigation identifies and explores a fundamental tension between the invocators religious imagination and the healthcare workers clinical imagination. To help alleviate this tension, the clinical ethics consultant should begin by identifying the different ways in which miracle-invocators employ miracle-language. I argue that miracle-language functions in three distinct (yet overlapping) ways: a political attempt to wrest decision-making authority away from the medical team, a doxological statement of faith in Providence, or an existential expression of inquiry into relationships between self, God, and world. By expressing empathy and openly exploring the moral values that undergird the invocators hope for a miracle, the clinical ethics consultant can help medicine recognize the interdependence between overall well-being and religious commitment.