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Ethics and Internet Healthcare: An Ontological Reflection

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 March 2001

ROBERT MAKUS
Affiliation:
Philosophy, the University of San Francisco

Abstract

Recently, when I was diagnosed with an incurable and terminal bone marrow disease, I was dismayed to hear my doctor tell me that there were only three treatments available, two of which were unavailable to me because of my already frail condition. Furthermore, only 15% of patients responded at all to the third treatment, which would not cure but only impede the development of the disease. My response was to verify this information by going to the World Wide Web, and to my delight I found some 20 other treatments (albeit experimental) that my doctor had not mentioned. My experience typifies one of the significant advantages to patients arising out of the development of Internet medicine, and particularly of web sites devoted to health issues: Information previously parceled out by one's doctor is now easily available to anyone with access to a computer.

Type
SPECIAL SECTION: CYBERETHICS: THE INTERNET AND ALLIED TECHNOLOGIES
Copyright
© 2001 Cambridge University Press

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