Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
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Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
CHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2c disease invites cinematic treatment of commonly encountered bioethical concerns. As expected, the interest of screenwriters is piqued by major topics such as euthanasia in devastating neurologic disease, brain death, and organ donation (and the far more entertaining topic of organ trafficking). Un Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2ethical experimentation and lack of informed consent are always of interest and are bound to provoke the audience, and some screenwriters are willingEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
to go an extra mile. In An Act of Murder (1948)there is a “mercy killing” when a brain tumor causes unbearable pain. In this film, the patient is killCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2s. Medical ethics can be largely ignored, and who does not remember Frankie (Glint Eastwood) in Million Dollar Kaby'"' (2004) sneaking into the hospital ward to disconnect a paralyzed ex-boxer from the ventilator? Such scenes get media attention, but we do not know if Hollywood cares about this misr Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2epresentation.In reality, there are major challenges to be dealt with, and some of it is desperately sad. 'I here is the decision of whether to withdrEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
aw care in patients when treatment is considered futile; the decision of patients not to proceed with long-term care; and conflicting situations withiCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2a nursing home has been addressed in feature films. Ethics in film also may involve the compassionate care of neurologic patients.Ihese bioethical topics are portrayed in many films and touch all specialties, and thus arc a potentially rich source of leaching and discussion. The examination of neuro Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2elhics in film can be very interesting, and the reason for including it in this book will become abundantly clear when we watch the films discussed inEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
this chapter. Some of them are “mandatory” watching, not necessarily because what is portrayed is right, but more often because it is wrong or highlyCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2by Barry Levinson, written by Adam Mazer; Golden Globe Award and Emmy Award for outstanding lead actor for Al Pacino; distributed by HBO Films.RatingOne reflex hammer - incorrect depictionsTwo reflex hammers - some error in depiction but oi interestthree reflex hammers - parts can be used for teachi Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2nghour reflex hammers - mandatory viewingCriticism and ContextUte euthanasia movement did not start with Jack Kevorkian. UteEuthanasia Society of AmerEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
ica was founded in 1938. The initial successes inNeuroethics in Film ■ 151swaying public opinion were rapidly nullified after the Second World War wheCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2Cruzan cases of persistent vegetative state, but there has been no substantial change in physician-assisted suicide laws. Despite initiatives in many US stales, physician-assisted suicide has only become legal in the stales of Oregon, Washington, Montana, and Vermont—with restrictions. Physician-ass Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2isted suicide is illegal in most countries, including Canada, Australia, all of Asia, and most European countries, including Germany and France. JackEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
Kevorkian is a different story.It has taken some lime, but finally Jack Kevorkian—arguably one of the most controversial physicians in the United StatCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2y Levinson (Rain Man). Because progressive neurologic disease, including nonterminal disabilities such as multiple sclerosis, is a common reason for physician-assisted suicide—at least in Kevorkian’s view—this film is highly relevant for neurologists.Medical organizations have always felt a great un Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2ease with Kevorkian’s ideas, and this is clearly stated early in the movie. (“I love you, Jack, but most colleagues think you are nuts.”) Kevorkian’sEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
zeal definitively became a controversy when the British Medical Journal in 1996 published an editorial entitled “Jack Kevorkian: A Medical Hero,” claiCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2ocinema: When Film Meets NeurologyJack Kevorkian has been admired, ignored, and caricatured. He was a celebrity and was greeted with applause on many talk shows. His infamous Volkswagen minivan—where he assisted patients in their suicide after driving to meet them in remote places—has been for sale Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2on eBay. His macabre artwork shows Nazi symbols and decapitations. One of his paintings has been used as an album cover by the sludge metal band AcidEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
Bath.The medical side of Jack Kevorkian’s story has been well documented. Dr. Kevorkian, a pathologist, claimed to have assisted in over 130 deaths. HCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2chine built from scraps that provided a combination of barbiturates, a neuromuscular blocker, and potassium chloride. Later, when his medical license was revoked (and possibly because the necessary drugs could not be easily obtained anymore), he changed to the Mercitron (connoting mercy), consisting Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2 simply of a carbon monoxide canister and a mask. However, after he administered a lethal injection to a patient (Thomas Youk, a patient with amyotropEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
hic lateral sclerosis [ALS]) and used the television show 60 Minutes to broadcast the video of Youk’s euthanasia in 1998, he was charged with first-deCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2to Jack Kevorkian very well, but the viewer should be warned because some clips from the original Kevorkian files show actual patients, intermingled with clips of actors. The film shows patients with Alzheimer’s disease, ALS, MS, and spinal cord injury. (The inclusion of neurologic disease is an ove Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2rrepresentation based on a review of his cases of euthanasia in Oakland County, Michigan, 1990-1998, which showed that 38% had neurologic disease, 25%Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
had terminal illness, and 35% had pain.)The movie also shows two patients who were rejected by Kevorkian, suggesting that he had personal criteria foCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2cial scarring—shown after a botched suicide attempt—is diagnosed by Kevorkian as depressed and is told with little compassion, “We cannot help you.” The screenwriter here suggests that Kevorkian is not available for all of US in despair. How Kevorkian determines to assist a patient in dying is not a Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2ddressed. Most disturbing is a scene in which a patient is shown struggling with the mask, after whichNeuroethics in Film ■ 153a plastic hood is placeEbook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2
d over his head, eventually requiring two attempts to end his life.Ihe movie suggests that there has been meticulous documentation of these cases by KCHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologic Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2tch to set oil'an infusion or pulls a paper clip from a section of compressed tubing, allowing the drug or gas to go to the patient. The film clearly shows an operation on a shoestring, and one of his assistants, played by John Goodman, says, “Jack Kevorkian is cheap.” Ebook Neurocinema - when film meets neurology: Part 2CHAPTER 4Neuroethics in FilmThe only thing worse than your kid dying on you is him wanting to.The Sea Inside (2004)INTRODUCING MAIN THEMES INeurologicGọi ngay
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