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Articles

In Answer to Critics: The Revised, Final Version of a Difficult Moral Question About Cooperation by Catholic Hospitals

Pages 59-76 | Published online: 01 Jun 2017

References

  • Appendix 2 of Difficult Moral Questions is especially relevant to this question; its last two sections comment on the appendix on formal and material cooperation in the 1994 revision of the ERDs and the moral significance of various sons of pressure - "duress" in a wide sense.
  • John Paul II, Vita Consecrata, 83 (notes omitted), AAS 88 (1996) 460-61, OR, 3 Apr. 1996, xvi.
  • Richard McCormick, SJ., “The Catholic Hospital Today: Mission Impossible?”Origins, 24 (1995): 648-53, proposes several characteristics of the context in which health care is now being delivered as grounds for suggesting (though he does not firmly assert) that "the heart of the Catholic health care culture is gone.
  • The mission has become impossible" (649). An illustration ofthe tension between mission and fmancial viability for one (unnamed) Catholic hospital: Marie Wolff, " 'No Margin, No Mission': Challenge to Institutional Ethics," Business and Professional Ethics Journal, 12:2 (Summer, 1993): 39-50.
  • In my judgment, they are morally similar to the "simple case" of in vitro fertilization.
  • Patricia A. Cahill, “Response to 'The Principles of Cooperation and Their Application to the Present States of Health Care Evolution’, ” in The Splendor of Truth and Health Care, Proceedings of the Fourteenth Workshop for Bishops, ed. Russell E. Smith (Braintree, MA: The Pope John Center, 1995),238-42, makes the point (239): "The majority of joint ventures, networks, mergers and affiliations which have occurred and which are on the drawing board are, from my observation, driven from a business or economic perspective. The leaders responsible for consummating these arrangements understand the business world well. They also understand and support fully the fact that no proscribed services may be offered by their own Catholic institution. However, when the transaction under consideration is between the Catholic provider and a non-Catholic provider and its consummation promises improved fiscal well-being for the Catholic
  • William B. Smith, "Cooperation in Health Care", Homiletic and Pastoral Review, 96:9 (July 1996): 70-72, agrees in questioning the possibility ofavoiding formal cooperation with other parties' wrongdoing when setting up the joint arrangement.
  • The quotations in the argument are from Russell E. Smith, "The Principles of Cooperation and Their Application to the Present State ofHealth Care Evolution", in The Splendor ofTruth and Health Care, 228-29.
  • Russell E. Smith, "Ethical Quandary: Forming Hospital Partnerships", The Linacre Quarterly, 63:2 (May 1996): 90.
  • Sheila Cassidy, Sharing the Darkness: The Spirituality ofCaring (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books, 1991), shows both how providing hospice care can be a true apostolate and how great the need is for such care; as the culture of death intensifies, the need and apostolic potential ofsuch work will increase. For a fuller understanding of hospices and how they differ from hospitals, see SandoI Stoddard, The Hospice Movement: A Better Way of Caring for the Dying, rev. ed. (New York: Vintage Books, 1992)

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