The television drama ER has been delivering excellent stories around death and dying as well as the misadventures of the walking wounded for fifteen years now. After a long break, I have returned to faithfully follow it’s final season and it has not disappointed. The plot and multiple story lines of ER are quite complex and unfold over weeks so serendipity was probably the cause for last night’s episode to deal with the topic of kidney disease and kidney transplants on World Kidney Day. As I discussed in Wednesday’s post, the purpose of World Kidney Day is to increase awareness. The aim is to prevent chronic kidney disease by encouraging people to make choices that support healthy kidneys and get appropriate screening test for kidney function when necessary.
Posts Tagged ‘autonomy’
The Story of a Kidney
Posted in on Treatment, the Question of Ethics, tagged autonomy, bioethics, kidney disease, television, TV on March 13, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
Doctors Appreciate the Active & Informed Patient
Posted in on Prevention, on Treatment, tagged autonomy, bioethics, prevention on January 9, 2009 | Leave a Comment »
In the NYTimes.com article, In Search of a Good Doctor, Pauline Chen, MD surveys several fellow doctors to provide health care consumers and patients with guidance on selecting physicians but more importantly navigating health information available on the internet. She states:
And according to several of the doctors I spoke with, the amount of information [...]
Has the Time Come for Mandatory HIV/AIDS Testing
Posted in from The Bench, on Prevention, the Question of Ethics, tagged AIDS, autonomy, bioethics, HIV, privacy on December 8, 2008 | Leave a Comment »
December began with the 20th annual observance of World AIDS Day. Both the NY Times and the Washington Post ran articles discussing the potential benefits of mandatory testing in curbing the incidence (new cases) and prevalence (all existing cases) of the disease. The Washington Post article focused on implementing such a policy in the United [...]










