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Title page for ETD etd-04022009-132653


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Camosy, Charles Christopher
Author's Email Address ccamosy@nd.edu
URN etd-04022009-132653
Title Treatment of Imperiled Newborns: The Social Quality of Life Model in Light of Catholic Social Teaching
Degree Doctor of Philosophy
Department Theology
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Maura Ryan Committee Chair
David Solomon Committee Member
Gerald McKenny Committee Member
Todd Whitmore Committee Member
Keywords
  • Relational Anthropology
  • Personhood
  • Neonatalolgy
  • Ordinary and Extraordinary Means
  • Quality of Life
  • Distributive Justice
  • Catholic Social Thought
Date of Defense 2008-08-25
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
Because of the technological shift that our modern medical era has brought to the treatment and care of imperiled newborns, many persons have been saved who otherwise would have died. Though concerns about the quality of life for many of these newborns have come to the fore as a result, the importance of social factors in a broad understanding of what quality of life means is an oft-neglected topic and can be seen clearly within a context of Catholic Social Teaching. If one takes seriously the intrinsically social nature of persons, a preferential option for the poor, the universal destination of goods, and other like principles, the central thesis of the dissertation becomes clear: though all newly born human infants are full moral persons, what kind of treatments are beneficial or burdensome cannot be seen apart from complex social questions with regard to distribution of resources. Though more research is needed on treatment outcomes and their long-term costs before most specific reforms could be prudently enacted, the dissertation argues that certain neonatal treatments are disproportionate with the common good and ought to be foregone.
Files
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 28.8 Modem   56K Modem   ISDN (64 Kb)   ISDN (128 Kb)   Higher-speed Access 
  CamosyC042009.pdf 968.38 Kb 00:04:28 00:02:18 00:02:01 00:01:00 00:00:05

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