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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
6 pages in length. Akin to mankind's hierarchy through survival of the fittest, the current concern over allocation of health care borrows from a manmade version of Darwin's theory by deciding which person is more worthy of lifesaving efforts based upon their quality of life. The extent to which the global population is far too immense for available health care resources to support it speaks to the need for novel –- if not ethically questionable –- alternatives that will provide health care to the largest number or, in other words, support the greater good of the human species. This expectation of scarcity, the pertinent issue surrounds knowing which person is given the responsibility of interpreting one individual's worthiness over another's when quality of life is so controvertible and wavering. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLChltcrallo.rtf
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of lifesaving efforts based upon their quality of life. The extent to which the global population is far too immense for available health care resources to support it speaks
to the need for novel -- if not ethically questionable -- alternatives that will provide health care to the largest number or, in other words, support the greater good of
the human species. This expectation of scarcity, the pertinent issue surrounds knowing which person is given the responsibility of interpreting one individuals worthiness over anothers when quality of life
is so controvertible and wavering (Kuhse and Singer). As Adorno duly points out, health care has moved outside national boundaries and into the precariousness of global challenge, a reality
that already has the earmark of establishing "common standards that can be regarded as the beginning of an international biomedical law. One of the main features of this new
legal discipline is the integration of its principles into a human rights framework" (Adorno 959). II. QUALITY OF LIFE: THE ULTIMATE DETERMINANT Allocation of health care is such that
those who present with a better chance of survival or a better quality of life after that survival "win" the opportunity to be saved. In essence, to allocate health
care is to pick and choose who gets to live in a world where there are not enough resources to save everyone. The ethical implications of such a detrimental
setback to human rights are both grand and far-reaching; that no single connotation of "quality" exists in the definition of quality of life illustrates how those who are involved in
the decision-making process draw upon personal interpretation that does not necessarily correlate with others. A worrisome development in the ongoing debate over allocated
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