References
Caplan AL. Informed consent and provider-patient relationships in rehabilitation medicine.Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1988; 69:312–17.
Kaufert JM, Kaufert PA. Who shall live or how shall they live? Consumer and professional perspectives on treatment/non-treatment decisions. In: Duncan B, Woods, DE., eds.Ethical issues in disability and rehabilitation: Report of an international conference 1989. New York, NY: World Institute on Disability, Rehabilitation International, and the World Rehabilitation Fund; 1989:63–72.
Scofield GR. Ethical considerations in rehabilitation medicine.Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1993; 74:341–46.
Caplan AL, Callahan D, Haas J. Ethical and policy issues in rehabilitation medicine.The Hastings Center Report. (Special Supplement). 1987; 17(4):1–20.
Hahn H. Theories and values: Ethics and contrasting perspectives on disability. In: Duncan B, Woods DE, eds.Ethical issues in disability and rehabilitation: A report of an international conference 1989. New York, NY: World Institute on Disability, Rehabilitation International, and the World Rehabilitation Fund; 1989:101–104.
May WF.The physician's covenant: Images of the healer in medical ethics. Philadelphia, PA: The Westminster Press; 1983.
Groce N.The U.S. role in international disability activities: A history and a look towards the future. New York, NY: World Institute on Disability, the World Rehabilitation Fund, and Rehabilitation International; 1992.
Thobaben JR.The social and moral identity of traumatic brain injury survivors. Unpublished manuscript; 1994.
Dougherty, CJ. Quality-adjusted life years and the ethical values of health care.American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1994; 73(1):61–65.
Paris MJ. Attitudes of medical students and health-care professionals toward people with disabilities.Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1993; 74:818–25.
LaPuma J. Right of refusal.Cortlandt Forum. 1994; 7(8):43.
White RB. A demand to die.Hastings Center Report. 1975; 5(3):9–10.
Livneh H. On the origins of negative attitudes toward people with disabilities. In: Marinelli RP, Del Orto AE, eds.The psychological and social impact of physical disability. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Springer Publishing Company; 1984.
Bellah RN, Madsen R, Sullivan WM, Swidler A, Tipton SM.Habits of the heart: Individualism and commitment in american life. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press; 1985.
Hallowell J.Liberalism: The political expression of individualism. In: Veatch RM, ed.Cross cultural perspectives in medical ethics: readings. Boston, MA: Jones and Bartlett Publishers; 1989: 82–94.
Moore AD, Bombardier CH, Brown PB, Patterson DR. Coping and emotional attributions following spinal cord injury.International Journal of Rehabilitation Research. 1994; 17: 39–48.
Reidy K, Caplan B. Causal factors in spinal cord injury: Patients' evolving perceptions and association with depression.Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1994; 75: 837–42.
Ackerman TF, Strong C.Nasogastric tube feedings for an elderly stroke patient: A casebook of medical ethics. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1989: 96–97.
Bach JR, Campagnolo DI, Hoeman S. Life satisfaction of individuals with duchenne muscular dystrophy using long-term mechanical ventilatory support.American Journal of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1991; 70: 129–35.
Purtilo RB. Ethical issues in the treatment of chronic ventilator-dependent patients.Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1986; 67: 718–21.
Maynard FM, Muth AS. The choice to end life as a ventilator-dependent quadriplegic.Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. 1987; 68:862–64.
Fox E, Stocking C. Ethics consultants' recommendations for life-prolonging treatment of patients in a persistent vegetative state.Journal of the American Medical Association. 1993; 270: 2578–82.
Rawls J.A theory of justice. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press; 1974.
Veatch RM.A theory of medical ethics. New York, NY: Basic Books, Inc.; 1981.
Engelhardt HT, Jr.Bioethics and secular humanism: The search for a common morality. Philadelphia, PA: Trinity Press International; 1991.
Annas GJ.Standard of care: The law of American bioethics. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993.
Battin MP.The least worst death: Essays in bioethics on the end of life. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 1994.
Momeyer RW. The limits of personal autonomy: The case of Donald/Dax Cowart.Confronting Death. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press; 1992.
Pence GE. Elizabeth Bouvia and voluntary death.Classic Cases in Medical Ethics. New York, NY: McGraw Hill; 1990.
Loccetti S. In search of independence: Quadriplegic pleads for center for disabled.Atlanta Constitution. 1990; Feb 22. Reprinted in: Duncan B, Woods DE, eds.Ethical Issues in Disability and Rehabilitation: A report of an international conference 1989. New York, NY; World Institute on Disability, Rehabilitation International, and the World Rehabilitation Fund; 1989:101–104.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Thobaben, J.R. The case of Mr. Sims. HEC Forum 7, 94–109 (1995). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01439237
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01439237