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  • A. Seiffer, Linda Clare & Rudolf Harvey (2005). The Role of Personality and Coping Style in Relation to Awareness of Current Functioning in Early-Stage Dementia. Aging and Mental Health 9 (6):535-541.
    Anosognosia in Philosophy of Cognitive Science
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  • 182.0Linda Clare (2002). Developing Awareness About Awareness in Early-Stage Dementia: The Role of Psychosocial Factors. Dementia 1 (3):295-312.
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  • 142.8K. P. Rankin, E. Baldwin, C. Pace-Savitsky, J. H. Kramer & B. L. Miller (2005). Self Awareness and Personality Change in Dementia. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry 76 (5):632-639.
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  • 111.7Andrew Balfour (2006). Thinking About the Experience of Dementia: The Importance of the Unconscious. Journal of Social Work Practice 20 (3):329-346.
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  • 86.1Jan de Lepeleire & Chris Gastmans (2009). Living to the Bitter End? A Personalist Approach to Euthanasia in Persons with Severe Dementia. Bioethics.
    The number of people suffering from dementia will rise considerably in the years to come. This will have important implications for society. People suffering from dementia have to rely on relatives and professional caregivers when their disorder progresses. Some people want to determine for themselves their moment of death, if they should become demented. They think that the decline in personality caused by severe dementia is shocking and unacceptable. In this context, some people consider euthanasia as a way to avoid (...) total deterioration. In this article, we discuss some practical and ethical dilemmas regarding euthanasia in persons with severe dementia based on an advance euthanasia directive. We are using a personalist approach in dealing with these ethical dilemmas. (shrink)
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  • 86.1Jan Lepeleire Chris Gastmandes (2010). Living to the Bitter End? A Personalist Approach to Euthanasia in Persons with Severe Dementia. Bioethics 24 (2):78-86.
    The number of people suffering from dementia will rise considerably in the years to come. This will have important implications for society. People suffering from dementia have to rely on relatives and professional caregivers when their disorder progresses. Some people want to determine for themselves their moment of death, if they should become demented. They think that the decline in personality caused by severe dementia is shocking and unacceptable. In this context, some people consider euthanasia as a way to avoid (...) total deterioration. In this article, we discuss some practical and ethical dilemmas regarding euthanasia in persons with severe dementia based on an advance euthanasia directive. We are using a personalist approach in dealing with these ethical dilemmas. (shrink)
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  • 85.3Piero Antuono & Jan Beyer (1999). The Burden of Dementia: A Medical and Research Perspective. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 20 (1).
    Alzheimer's disease remains the most common form of dementia. Dementia symptoms vary depending on individual personality, life experience, and social and cultural influences. As dementia progresses, involvement of multi-disciplinary health care professionals is needed to manage the disease. Alzheimer research is progressing rapidly. While 5% of all Alzheimer's disease may be genetically determined, the majority is not. Susceptibility genes can reveal the risk of contracting Alzheimer's disease. Early life risk factors such as education, nutrition, and vascular disease may increase the (...) likelihood of dementia in later life. In the United States, two acetylcholinesterase inhibitors have been approved as cognitive enhancers. Possible prevention and symptomatic treatment interventions have focused on estrogen replacement therapy, antioxidants, and anti-inflammatory medications. Research advances have improved the clinical management of dementia. Ethical implications to the patient, family, and society are multiple and remain challenging. (shrink)
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  • 81.8Kumar C. Rallapalli, Scott J. Vitell, Frank A. Wiebe & James H. Barnes (1994). Consumer Ethical Beliefs and Personality Traits: An Exploratory Analysis. Journal of Business Ethics 13 (7).
    The present study examines the relationships between consumers'' ethical beliefs and personality traits. Based on a survey of 295 undergraduate business students, the authors found that individuals with high needs for autonomy, innovation, and aggression, as well as individuals with a high propensity for taking risks tend to have less ethical beliefs concerning possible consumer actions. Individuals with a high need for social desirability and individuals with a strong problem solving coping style tend to have more ethical beliefs concerning possible (...) consumer actions. The needs for achievement, affiliation, complexity and an emotion solving coping style were not significantly correlated with consumer ethical beliefs. (shrink)
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  • 79.4Mary C. Olson (1999). “The Heart Still Beat, but the Brain Doesn't Answer”. Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 20 (1).
    The purpose of this exploratory and descriptive study was to examine old-age dementia in the Hmong community of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Formal and informal Hmong leaders were interviewed to determine the prevalence of dementia in the Hmong community and how it is perceived and experienced. Interviews revealed few cases of dementia among the Hmong. Dementia was perceived as a natural part of the life cycle, rather than as a devastating disease that robs individuals of their autonomy. Treatment is not sought for (...) dementia. Some of the common manifestations of dementia, such as wandering and combativeness, were rare or non-existent in the Hmong community. Individuals with dementia are cared for in their sons' homes. Nursing home placement in advanced dementia was only acceptable if sanctioned by the entire extended family. Further research on the Hmong perception of and experience with dementia needs to be conducted in other Hmong communities to validate the generalizability of these results. (shrink)
    Biomedical Ethics in Applied Ethics
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  • 77.6Cees M. P. M. Hertogh, Marike E. de Boer, Rose-Marie Dröes & Jan A. Eefsting (2007). Would We Rather Lose Our Life Than Lose Our Self? Lessons From the Dutch Debate on Euthanasia for Patients with Dementia. American Journal of Bioethics 7 (4):48 – 56.
    This article reviews the Dutch societal debate on euthanasia/assisted suicide in dementia cases, specifically Alzheimer's disease. It discusses the ethical and practical dilemmas created by euthanasia requests in advance directives and the related inconsistencies in the Dutch legal regulations regarding euthanasia/assisted suicide. After an initial focus on euthanasia in advanced dementia, the actual debate concentrates on making euthanasia/assisted suicide possible in the very early stages of dementia. A review of the few known cases of assisted suicide of people with so-called (...) early dementia raises the question why requests for euthanasia/assisted suicide from patients in the early stage of (late onset) Alzheimer's disease are virtually non-existent. In response to this question two explanations are offered. It is concluded that, in addition to a moral discussion on the limits of anticipatory choices, there is an urgent need to develop research into the patient's perspective with regard to medical treatment and care-giving in dementia, including end-of-life care. (shrink)
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  • 75.1Annalena Venneri & Michael F. Shanks (2004). Belief and Awareness: Reflections on a Case of Persistent Anosognosia. Neuropsychologia 42 (2):230-238.
    Anosognosia in Philosophy of Cognitive Science
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