Listening to Women of Color with Breast Cancer: Theological and Ethical Insights for U.S. Healthcare (Part 1 of 2)
November 2005 (Volume 5 Issue 11)
This is part one in a two-part series on listening to women of color with breast cancer.1 Click here for part two of the series. [1] I am a Christian social ethicist who contends that adequate moral inquiry necessarily involves interdisciplinary reflection and conversation. In my view, the proper place of a professional ethicist is […]
“Keeping it Real” While Staying Out of the “Loony Bin”: Social Ethics for Healthcare Systems (Listening to Women of Color with Breast Cancer: Insights for U.S. Healthcare)
November 2005 (Volume 5 Issue 11)
This is the second article in a two-part series by Aana Vigen on “Listening to Women of Color with Breast Cancer: Theological and Ethical Insights for U.S. Healthcare.” Click here for part 1 of this series. [1] These women who have survived or are living with breast cancer shared a great deal of embodied wisdom […]