ANZ Health Catalogue 2022 - 2023

Page 12

Health Ethics and Law

Cultural Safety

Available Now 2015, 228 x 152 mm, 284 pp 9781107477445 | Paperback (also available as an eBook)

Available Now 2017, 247 x 174 mm, 420 pp 9781107455474 | Paperback (also available as an eBook)

Health Law

Cultural Safety in Aotearoa New Zealand

Frameworks and Context

Second Edition

Anne-Maree Farrell, La Trobe University John Devereux, University of Queensland Isabel Karpin, University of Technology Sydney Penelope Weller, RMIT University

Edited by Dianne Wepa, Hawkes Bay District Health Board

Health Law: Frameworks and Context adopts a theoretically informed and principles-based approach to examining health law. Appealing to students and academic scholars alike, the text moves beyond traditional medical law frameworks to provide a broader contextual understanding of the way in which law intersects with health.

In this second edition of Cultural Safety in Aotearoa New Zealand, editor Dianne Wepa presents a range of theoretical and practice-based perspectives adopted by experienced educators who are active in cultural safety education. Cultural Safety in Aotearoa New Zealand will equip students, tutors, managers, policy analysts and others involved in the delivery of healthcare with the tools to acknowledge the importance of cultural difference in achieving health and wellbeing in diverse communities.

Contents

Contents

Introduction: 1. Health law: frameworks and context; Part I. Frameworks. Section A. Theories, Perspectives and Ethics in Health: 2. Philosophical bioethics and health law; 3. Socio-legal perspectives on patient-doctor relations; 4. Social determinants of health and the role of law; 5. Health and human rights law; Section B. Institutions and Regulation: 6. The regulatory framework for health in Australia; 7. Regulating health professionals; 8. Regulating patient safety and redress; Part II. Context. Section A. Patients, Doctors and Health Care: 9. Consent to medical treatment; 10. Substituted decision-making; 11. Medical negligence; 12. Confidentiality, privacy and access to information; Section B. Law at the Beginning and the End of Life: 13. Regulating reproduction; 14. Regulating emerging reproductive technologies; 15. Withdrawal and withholding of medical treatment; 16. Euthanasia and assisted suicide; Section C. Law and the Human Body: 17. Organ and tissue donation and transplantation; 18. Property and human tissue; 19. Biobanks; 20. Human genetics and the law; Section D. Law and Populations: 21. Indigenous health and the law; 22. Health law and people with disability; 23. Mental health law; 24. Public health law; 25. Global health and the law.

Part I. Setting the Scene: 1. Towards cultural safety; 2. Cultural safety and the Nursing Council of New Zealand; 3. Cultural safety: daring to be different; Part II. The Foundations of Cultural Safety: 4. Cultural safety and continuing competence; 5. Culture and ethnicity: what is the question? 6. Te Tiriti o Waitangi/Treaty of Waitangi 1840: its influence on health practice; 7. Exploring prejudice, understanding paradox and working towards new possibilities; 8. Navigating the ethics in cultural safety; 9. Being a culturally safe researcher; Part III. Fields of Practice: 10. Child, youth and family health care; 11. Cultural safety in mental health: a practice example; 12. Midwifery practice; 13. Culturally safe care for ethnically and religiously diverse communities; 14. Working with the aged: lessons from residential care; 15. Sex, gender and sexual orientation; 16. Maori health: Maori- and Whanau-centred practice; 17. Nursing and working with disability.

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