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On one of the first pages of this otherwise seri- ous book about medical ethics is a two-line dedication from the editor: "To my daughter Hannah, who makes it all clear." Lois Snyder laughs. She's a lawyer, a medical ethicist and a mother. After a day filled with dilemmas, she goes home to a 3 - year-old child who gives new meaning to the word "clarity." M.N. Ozdaglar, M.D., F.I.C.S. Senior Member Of America Phlebology Society PAW MICHIGAN VEIN CLINICS PLYMOUTH 851 S. Main Street 313-459-0980 BIRMINGHAM 30600 Telegraph 810-642-0210 Illness For life A PERSONALIZED PROGRAM FOR FITNESS & WEIGHT LOSS Measurement Evaluation ► Nutritional Analysis ► Personal Trainer U Specialized Programs For ► People with Health Concerns Call for free consultation in your home or office (8 I 0) 299 4888 - ALICIA T. FREIDINGER • M.ED Exercise Physiology • ACSM, ACE, Fit, CPR Certified STAI R I DE STAI THE CAREFREE WAY TO CLIMB STAIRS When you're disabled, or just not able to move around as freely as you once could, stairs can be a real problem. But there is a simple answer. STAIR-GLIDE' powered stairway lift. Easily installed to frt curved or straight stairs. They give you back the 'ability to move around your own home. Folds back- getsjn nobody's way. CALL OR STOP BY FOR A FREE DEMONSTRATION LARRY ARONOFF STAIR-GLIDE° ACTON RENTAL & SALES (313) 891-6500 (810) 540-5550 "I think we- can learn a lot about the world from viewing it through the eyes of a child," Sny- der says. "I think, to be blunt, children have a way of cutting through the crap and identifying the issues at hand - and seeing the world in a purer way. Untainted. With a sharpened vision. They don't rely so much on rationalization." Snyder is the counsel for ethics and legal affairs for the Ameri- can College of Physicians, the country's largest medical-spe- cialty society, representing 89,000 internists and other doctors. She also is the editor of a new book, Ethical Choices: Case Studies for Medical Practice. In this book, which was pub- lished by her organization, ethi- cists, medical professors and health-policy experts present sce- narios of problems that doctors face in their daily practice, and then provide commentaries on how to han- dle them. A doctor no- tices a senior colleague drink- ing too much at a party and then being paged for med- ical advice. Sub- sequently, she learns that he has a drinking problem. What should she do? She should con- front him, and if that doesn't work, she should continue to pursue it - maybe even re- port him to the state medical society. A patient wants to be re- ferred to a neu- rologist, orthopedic sur- geon and der- matologist for problems that his doctor doesn't believe warrant special intervention. What does she do? She should tell him the truth, firmly and patiently. The how-to emphasis of Ethi- cal Choices is by design. "We want to make it clear that ethics isn't just a matter of per- sonal conscience, that the physi- cian doesn't just decide, 'I'll do whatever I think is right or wrong,"' explains Snyder from her office in Philadelphia. "There are objective principles at work here. There are ways of reaching answers, instead of just sort of throwing up your hands and letting actions take a course." But even the most specific of the case commentaries in this book are hedged with "shoulds" rather than "musts." Some are even more vague, focusing on pros and cons, rather than solu- tions. Both cases surrounding physi- cian-assisted suicide, for exam- ple, raise issues rather than make judgments. In one case, an elderly woman who is terminally ill persuades her doctor to prescribe her a suf- ficient number of barbiturates to commit suicide. In another case, a doctor struggles with a request from a dying ma-n for a lethal dose of morphine. Snyder said the commentators "sought to devote attention to end-of-life care and how to do that better. In those cases, in partic- ular, you are not going to see mandates on how to carry out physician-assisted suicide or even if it's right or wrong." Ethicists generally argue that the process of arriving at the an- swer is as important as the an- swer itself. "Readers do not want answers but rather tools or ways to think through problems," according to Arthur Caplan, director of the University of Pennsylvania Cen- ter for Bioethics. Caplan, who co-wrote the fore- word in Ethical Choices, likes the idea of commentaries without ab- solutes. "Hard-and-fast advice is not what folks look for in case- books," he says. Or, as Snyder puts it: "There is no one-size-fits-all in ethics." Snyder says this volume will be followed up with others as more case studies are collected. "A lot of what's out there on ethics tends to be rather theo- retical, based on an exposition of principles," she says. "We really think a case-study format is a good way to reach practicing physicians and medical students and residents, all of whom are people who have limited time and lots of demands on that time." Do physicians read these kinds of books? 'The real answer to that is no," concedes Dr. Ralph Ocampo, a