PHIL 1035 - Biomedical Ethics Credits: 3 Hours/Week: Lecture None Lab None Course Description: This course, intended for all students, provides background material in basic ethical theories, principles, and decision-making guidelines used in health care ethics. It examines moral issues confronting health care consumers, practitioners, and patients. It emphasizes the philosophical analysis of moral reasoning on specific topics such as truth-telling, confidentiality, human cloning, medical research, abortion, transplantation, allocation of resources, and euthanasia. Readings are selected from contemporary literature in bioethics. MnTC Goals 6 Humanities/Fine Arts, 9 Ethical/Civic Responsibility
Prerequisite(s): Course placement into college-level English and Reading OR completion of ENGL 0950 with a grade of C or higher OR completion of RDNG 0940 with a grade of C or higher and qualifying English Placement Exam OR completion of RDNG 0950 with a grade of C or higher and ENGL 0090 with a grade of C or higher OR completion of ESOL 0051 with a grade of C or higher and ESOL 0052 with a grade of C or higher. Corequisite(s): None Recommendation: None
Major Content
- Ethical theories and principles
- Models/guidelines of ethical decision-making
- Moral issues in biomedical ethics (these will vary depending on individual instructor’s choices)
- Diversity issues influencing health care decisions.
Learning Outcomes At the end of this course students will be able to:
- Explain basic ethical theories, principles, and decision-making guidelines used in biomedical ethics.
- Articulate the moral issues confronting health care practitioners, patients, consumers and others involved in medicine.
- Examine the moral and legal issues regarding public health policies.
- Articulate applications of ethical theory to contemporary moral problems.
- Articulate diversity challenges in health care.
Competency 1 (1-6) 06. 01. Demonstrate awareness of the scope and variety of works in the arts and humanities.
06. 02. Understand those works as expressions of individual and human values within an historical and social context.
06. 03. Respond critically to works in the arts and humanities. Competency 2 (7-10) 09. 01. Examine, articulate, and apply their own ethical views.
09. 02. Understand and apply core concepts (e.g. politics, rights and obligations, justice, liberty) to specific issues.
09. 03. Analyze and reflect on the ethical dimensions of legal, social, and scientific issues.
09. 05. Identify ways to exercise the rights and responsibilities of citizenship. Courses and Registration
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