REFERENCES
- Jennings B. A grassroots movement in bioethics. New York: The Hastings Center 1988.
- Vaux K, Vaux S. Four pathways of medical ethics. Second Opinion 1986: 76–89.
- Summing up: President's commission on ethical and legal problems in medicine and biomedical and behavioral research, 1983. Washington. D.C. U.S. Government Printing Office publication #0-435-071.
- Hamburg DA, Elliott GR, Parron DL. Health and behavior: frontiers of research in the biobehavioral sciences. Division of Mental Health and Behavioral Medicine. Institute of Medicine 1982. National Academy of Sciences.
- Caplan A, Callahan D, Haas J. Ethical and policy issues in rehabilitation medicine. A Hastings Center report, 1987; a special supplement.
- Purtilo R. Justice. liberty, compassion-humane health care and rehabilitation in the U.S.: some lessons from Sweden. New York, NY: World Rehabilitation Fund.
- White KL, ed. The task of medicine: dialogue at Wickenburg. Menlo Park Ca, 1988: Henry J. Kaiser Family Foundation.
- Berkowitz ED. Disabled policy: America's program for the handicapped. New York: Cambridge Press, 1987.
- Goldsmith MF. Health decisions for American people—subject of new national bioethical policy group. JAMA 1988; 260:2478.
- Crawshaw R, Garland M, Hines B, Lobitz C. Oregon health decisions: an experiment with informed community consent. JAMA 1985; 254:3213.
- Quality of life in allocating health care resources. Portland, OR, 1988 Oregon Health Decisions.
- Taking steps to plan for critical care decisions: advance directives, 1989. Waterby, VT; Vermont Ethics Network.
- Pilpel RH. Ethics issues book. New York, NY, 1989; National Health Council.
- Abrams FR. High-tech medicine in basic care. Colorado Economic Review 988; 4: 16–19.