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Table of Contents
Acronyms and abbreviations
Chapter 1. Introduction and Synopsis (Sheena Eagan and Daniel Messelken)
Chapter 2. ‘Gate-Keeping Access to Deployed Military Health Services’ – Perspectives of Military Medical Leaders (Martin CM Bricknell and Stefan Kowitz)
Chapter 3. Reconsidering triage: medical, ethical, and historical perspectives on planning for mass casualty events in military and civilian settings (Simon Horne, Robert James, Heather Draper and Emily Mayhew)
Chapter 4. Medical Rules of Eligibility: A Comparative Analysis (Joanne Clifford, Paul C. Eagan and Sheena M. Eagan)
Chapter 5. Ethical and Legal Basis for the Standards of Triage Used in the Russian Military Medical Service (Ivan Kholikov)
Chapter 6. The Phenomenon of Allocation: Military Pathways in the Light of Biomedical Ethical Principles (Dirk Fischer)
Chapter 7. Applying Battlefield Triage Ethics and Resource Allocation to a Contemporary Public Health Crisis: Lessons Learned from the Past and Adapting Them for the Future (Jeanne A Krick, Jacob S Hogue, Matthew A Studer, Tyler R Reese and Elliott M Weiss)
Chapter 8. Medical Triage by Moral Responsibility (Stephen N. Woodside)
Chapter 9. Medical Rules of Eligibility – Can preferential medical treatment provisions be ethically justified? (Daniel Messelken)
Chapter 10. Fairness in military care: Might a hybrid concept of equity be the answer? (Frederic Gilbert, Ian Stevens, Samia Hurst)
Chapter 11. Cicero and the problem of triage. Why there is no moral algorithm in distributing scarce resources (Bernhard Koch)
Chapter 12. Facing Death: An Ethical Exploration of Thanatophobia in Combat Casualty Care Resource (Erika “Ann” Jeschke, Hannah R. Martinez, Eleanor M. Choi, John Dorsch and Sarah L. Huffman).
Chapter 1. Introduction and Synopsis (Sheena Eagan and Daniel Messelken)
Chapter 2. ‘Gate-Keeping Access to Deployed Military Health Services’ – Perspectives of Military Medical Leaders (Martin CM Bricknell and Stefan Kowitz)
Chapter 3. Reconsidering triage: medical, ethical, and historical perspectives on planning for mass casualty events in military and civilian settings (Simon Horne, Robert James, Heather Draper and Emily Mayhew)
Chapter 4. Medical Rules of Eligibility: A Comparative Analysis (Joanne Clifford, Paul C. Eagan and Sheena M. Eagan)
Chapter 5. Ethical and Legal Basis for the Standards of Triage Used in the Russian Military Medical Service (Ivan Kholikov)
Chapter 6. The Phenomenon of Allocation: Military Pathways in the Light of Biomedical Ethical Principles (Dirk Fischer)
Chapter 7. Applying Battlefield Triage Ethics and Resource Allocation to a Contemporary Public Health Crisis: Lessons Learned from the Past and Adapting Them for the Future (Jeanne A Krick, Jacob S Hogue, Matthew A Studer, Tyler R Reese and Elliott M Weiss)
Chapter 8. Medical Triage by Moral Responsibility (Stephen N. Woodside)
Chapter 9. Medical Rules of Eligibility – Can preferential medical treatment provisions be ethically justified? (Daniel Messelken)
Chapter 10. Fairness in military care: Might a hybrid concept of equity be the answer? (Frederic Gilbert, Ian Stevens, Samia Hurst)
Chapter 11. Cicero and the problem of triage. Why there is no moral algorithm in distributing scarce resources (Bernhard Koch)
Chapter 12. Facing Death: An Ethical Exploration of Thanatophobia in Combat Casualty Care Resource (Erika “Ann” Jeschke, Hannah R. Martinez, Eleanor M. Choi, John Dorsch and Sarah L. Huffman).