Bioethics and Gerontology: The Value of Thinking Together

Author:

Berlinger Nancy1,de Medeiros Kate2ORCID,Girling Laura3

Affiliation:

1. Research Department, The Hastings Center, Garrison, New York, USA

2. Department of Sociology and Gerontology, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, USA

3. Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Public Health, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

Abstract

Abstract The interdisciplinary field of bioethics focuses on what it means to be a person, flourish as a person, and be respected as a person in different conditions of health, illness, or disability. Bioethics and policy research considers normative questions such as how a good society, through its priorities and investments, should demonstrate its commitments to the lives of different populations. Bioethics and humanities scholarship, often known as “health humanities,” shares affinities with age studies and disability studies and with narrative-based approaches to the study of human experience. Gerontology is concerned with the many aspects of life that affect how people age, including social structures and values that influence the experience of growing old. In this article, we briefly explore the evolution of bioethics, from a discourse that emerged in relation to developments in biomedicine, bioscience, and biotechnology; to research ethics; to broader ethical questions emerging from real-world conditions, with attention to how bioethics has considered the experience of aging. Until recently, most age-focused work in bioethics has concerned age-associated illness, particularly end-of-life decision making. Given the reality of population aging and the ethical concerns accompanying the shift in age for most places in the world, the further evolution of bioethics involves greater attention to the support of flourishing in late life and to social justice and health equity in aging societies. We argue that the discourses of bioethics and critical gerontology, in dialogue, can bring a new understanding of privilege and preference, disparity and disadvantage, and reflection and respect for aging individuals.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,General Medicine

Reference35 articles.

1. What makes a good life in late life? Citizenship and justice in aging societies [Special Issue];Berlinger;Hastings Center Report,2018

2. Ethical uncertainty in the care of hospitalized older adults: Challenges and pandemic considerations;Berlinger;Generations Today,2021

3. Becoming good citizens of aging societies;Berlinger;The Hastings Center Report,2018

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