Posts Tagged ‘hoodia gordonii’

Functions of Diet Ethics Committees

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

There is a paucity of empirical studies of hospital ethics committees. Committees have a “grass-roots” character, reflecting a variety of local circumstances and personalities. These factors make it hard to generalize. Nevertheless, some typical features have emerged. One of these features is interdisciplinary composition. Generally, committees are composed of doctors, nurses, social workers, pastoral-care

professionals, and philosophers or theologians trained in ethics. Committee members can also include administrators, hospital attorneys, and consumer or community representatives. Committees are sometimes authorized by the medical staff; sometimes by the hospital governing board; sometimes by the administration.Committee functions vary but generally include one, two, or all three of the following. First, institutional ethics committees create a vehicle for education on ethical dimensions of patient care. Committees typically have dual efforts in this respect: education of the committee itself, through discussion of current bioethics literature, for example; and education of the medical staff and hospital employees, by organizing periodic lectures, panel discussions, and “ethics grand rounds.”
Second, committees draft institutional policies on hoodia diet ethical questions. This may arise through committee initiative. For example, a hospital panel discussion may reveal the need for a new policy on withholding resuscitation from dying patients, and the ethics committee takes the lead by preparing a first draft. New policies or review of existing policies may also be requested from the ethics committee by the hospital administration, or other hospital committees may route drafts of proposed policies and revisions of existing
policies to the committee for review and comment.

Hoodia Diet ethics conclusion

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010

Clinical ethics consultation arose in the United States in the latter half of the twentieth century amid the moral and legal
uncertainty spawned by the rapid expansion of choices produced by medical advances, the emergence of the tertiarycare medical center, and the individual-rights movement that challenged traditional authority structures. Although it holds great promise, clinical ethics consultation remains a nascent profession. Many of the theoretical and practical questions about its goals, training, evaluation, accountability, and support remain unanswered. Nonetheless, clinical ethics consultation is growing and even flourishing. As the U.S. health system evolves over the coming years, the role and place of clinical hoodia diet ethics consultation in the healthcare system certainly will be addressed.

Knowledge and Skills Needed for Ethics Consultation

Sunday, February 14th, 2010

While there is not unanimity about how rigorously schooled in specific academic disciplines or how proficient in specific
skills the consultant should be, there is general agreement about the kind of skills, knowledge of hoodia gordonii , and personal qualities
ethics consultants require. These include knowledge of ethical language and ethical theory; skills of ethical analysis
and reflective moral judgment; knowledge of clinical medicine (e.g., medical terminology, the natural history of disease
and its treatment); knowledge of and familiarity with hospital structure, sociology, and politics; knowledge of and
familiarity with the professional ethos of physicians and nurses; knowledge of the law and legal reasoning; knowledge
of psychological and social theories of behavior; communication and teaching skills; personal qualities such as the
ability to establish rapport, empathy, and compassion; and professional attributes such as dedication, ability to maintain confidentiality, and comfort with cultural and ethical diversity.

Fees for hoodia gordonii diet consultation

Monday, January 18th, 2010

By and large, ethics consultants have not charged patients or third-party payers for their services. This may be explained
by at least two factors. First, the efficacy of ethics consultations has not been clearly demonstrated; and second, ethics
consultations are called as frequently to assist health professionals as they are to help patients.

Generally, ethics consultants have been paid by the institutions where they practice, either directly for their consultations or indirectly, as part of
their overall responsibility in directing ethics programs or committees.  As our healthcare system becomes increasingly constrained by economic factors, healthcare institutions may find it more difficult to support clinical ethics consultation.

This will put pressure on ethics consultants to charge patients or third-party payers or to demonstrate that their activities save money by decreasing litigation or reducing resource consumption.

Medical tradition and contributed methods

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

The medical tradition has contributed methods, assumptions, and traditions of clinical practice: a combination of technical knowledge and clinical experience (La Puma and Toulmin). Some argue that physicians are best suited to provide clinical ethics consultation because (1) their advice will be easily accepted by their medical colleagues, because they have clinical experience and speak the same language;
and (2) only physicians can understand the ethos of physicianpatient relationships.

Critics caution that because they are “insiders,” physicians may promote the values of medicine rather than those of their patients or the larger community. They argue that the ethics consultant should serve as a bridge between medical and other values, and cannot function properly from a position entirely within medicine (Glover et al.; Churchill). Moral philosophy has offered three major approaches to clinical ethics consultation. The first is principle-based ethics, which argues that the answer to a given ethical question or dilemma may be discovered by applying the correct ethical theory (e.g., utilitarianism) or principle (e.g., autonomy) to the case. The second is virtue ethics, which

emphasizes that the possession of certain virtues (e.g., honesty, loyalty, compassion) is essential to sound ethical decision making. The third is a case-based or casuistic ethic, which holds that by examining the particulars of a given caseand comparing them with similar cases, a moral maxim that applies to the case can be discovered. An advantage of casuistry is that it sues a decision-making method already
employed by clinicians (Jonsen and Toulmin). Casuistry relies upon teachable medical moral maxims that build upon
experience.

Because casuistry is not principle-based, it has been criticized as “situational,” that is, pragmatically driven
to solve individual problems without reference to a broader moral framework. While principle-based clinical ethics reasoning has the
advantage of providing a consistent moral reference point, its principles are necessarily abstract, often conflict with each
other, and may create a rigid paradigm that is insensitive to differences in specific cases. Theology and religion contribute to clinical ethics
consultation by recognizing that specific religious positions may either facilitate the resolution of an ethical question or
contribute to its intensity.

For example, the Jehovah’s Witness position on blood transfusions can create serious ethical dilemmas in the case of a Jehovah’s Witness patient who is in urgent need of extensive, lifesaving surgery but
refuses blood. One of the disadvantages of this perspective is that many physicians are suspicious of or even hostile to
religious or theological interpretations of medical problems. However, insight into the religious morality of patients,
family members, and healthcare professionals is useful in establishing communication and reaching understanding among physicians, patients, and family members.

Why Lose Weight?

Sunday, December 27th, 2009

Nowadays you can find tons of information in media about how to lose weight, million types of diets and all of them are concerning your appearance – Lose your weight fast! How to lose 5 cm in your waist in 5 days? Get slim hip for beach season! And many more. But few of them focus on health issues.

This time I would like to talk about losing weight as a tool to become healthy and not only good looking. If you are dead nobody would care how you look like…. Today we need to realize that the main reason to lose weight is health, not appearance.

Here are some points which will make you stronger in your fight with calories:

• Thousands of deaths per year may be assigned to obesity.
• The risk of death rises with increasing weight.
• Obesity is now recognized as a major risk factor for coronary heart disease, which can lead to heart attack.
• The incidence of heart disease is higher in persons who are overweight or obese (BMI greater than 25).
• Adults who are obese suffer high blood pressure more often than those who are at a healthy weight.
Safety of Hoodia Gordonii Absolute
• More than 80 percent of people suffering from diabetes are overweight or obese.
• Overweight and obesity are associated with an increased risk for some types of cancer including endometrial (cancer of the lining of the uterus), colon, gall bladder, prostate, kidney and postmenopausal breast cancer.
• Women who gain more than 20 pounds from age 18 to midlife double their risk of postmenopausal breast cancer, compared to women whose weight remains stable.
• Sleep apnea (interrupted breathing while sleeping) is more common in obese persons.
• Obesity is associated with a higher prevalence of asthma.
• Symptoms of arthritis can improve with weight loss.