Home>>Medicare, ethics, and reflexive longevity: governing time and treatment in an aging society.

Search

About

Authors:
Address: Department of Anthropology, History and Social Medicine, Institute for Health and Aging, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
Journal:


Publication:


abstract

The clinical activities that constitute longevity making in the United States are perhaps the quintessential example of a dynamic modern temporality, characterized by the quest for risk reduction, the powerful progress narratives of science and medicine, and the personal responsibility of calculating the worth of more time in relation to medical options and age. This article explores how medicine materializes and problematizes time through a discussion of ethicality-in this case, the form of governance in which scientific evidence, Medicare policy and clinical knowledge and practice organize first, what becomes "thinkable" as the best medicine, and second, how that kind of understanding shapes a telos of living. Using liver disease and liver transplantation in the United States as my example, I explore the influence of Medicare coverage decisions on treatments, clinical standards, and ethical necessity. reflexive longevity-a relentless future-thinking about life itself-is one feature of this ethicality.



Related Articles
Making longevity in an aging society: linking Medicare policy and the new ethical field.
Perspect Biol Med. 2010
Making longevity in an aging society: linking Medicare policy and the new ethical field.
Kaufman SR. Perspect Biol Med. 2010 Summer; 53(3):407-24.
Making longevity in an aging society: linking ethical sensibility and Medicare spending.
Med Anthropol. 2009
Making longevity in an aging society: linking ethical sensibility and Medicare spending.
Kaufman SR. Med Anthropol. 2009 Oct; 28(4):317-25.
Time, clinic technologies, and the making of reflexive longevity: the cultural work of time left in an ageing society.
Sociol Health Illn. 2010
Time, clinic technologies, and the making of reflexive longevity: the cultural work of time left in an ageing society.
Kaufman SR. Sociol Health Illn. 2010 Feb 1; 32(2):225-37.
Review Ethical dilemma and resolution:a case scenario.
Indian J Med Ethics. 2007
Review Ethical dilemma and resolution:a case scenario.
Wells JK. Indian J Med Ethics. 2007 Jan-Mar; 4(1):31-3; discussion 34.
Review The ethical basis of the precautionary principle in health care decision making.
Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2005
Review The ethical basis of the precautionary principle in health care decision making.
ter Meulen RH. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol. 2005 Sep 1; 207(2 Suppl):663-7.