Searched for: person:caplaa01
Bioethics on trial
Caplan, A L
PMID: 2045277
ISSN: 0093-0334
CID: 165267
CREATIONIST BELIEF PRECLUDES CREDIBILITY ON SCIENCE ISSUES [Editorial]
CAPLAN, AL
ISI:A1991EX34900011
ISSN: 0890-3670
CID: 347242
Assessing values and preferences in long-term care : is it feasible and is it desirable? : summary and conclusions from a Working Conference on "Values Baseline Measures in Long-Term Care," sponsored by the University of Minnesota Long-term Care DECISIONS Resource Center, April 24-25, 1990, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Kane, Rosalie A; King, Cheryl D; Caplan, Arthur L
Minneapolis, Minn. : The Center, [1991]
Extent: ii, 102 p. : ill. ; 28 cm.
ISBN: n/a
CID: 165455
Legal and ethical issues in the practice of reuse
Priester, R; Caplan, A L
PMID: 10128661
ISSN: 0899-1073
CID: 165263
Beastly conduct: ethical issues in animal experimentation
Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur
in: Biomedical ethics by Mappes, Thomas A; Zembaty, Jane S [Eds]
New York : McGraw-Hill, c1991
pp. ?-?
ISBN: 9780070401266
CID: 336812
Medical prioritization is a bad idea
Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur
in: Human biology : health, homeostasis, and the environment by Chiras, Daniel D [Eds]
St. Paul : West Pub. Co., c1991
pp. 229-?
ISBN: 9780314794987
CID: 337572
Fetal tissue transplantation and the problem of elective abortion
Chapter by: Caplan, Arthur; Vawter, D; Gervais, K; Kearney, W
in: Organ replacement therapy : ethics, justice, commerce : first joint meeting of ESOT and EDTA/ERA, Munich, December 1990 by Land, W; Dossetor, John B [Eds]
Berlin ; New York : Springer-Verlag, c1991
pp. 491-498
ISBN: 9780387536873
CID: 337582
Giving and receiving : ethical issues in organ procurement and allocation
Caplan, Arthur
ORIGINAL:0008201
ISSN: 1053-2498
CID: 347872
Assume nothing : the current state of cadaver organ and tissue donation in the United States
Caplan, Arthur
ORIGINAL:0008202
ISSN: 0905-9199
CID: 347882
Brave new babes [Newspaper Article]
Caplan, Arthur
Manipulating sperm, eggs and embryos takes us about as close as we can get to controlling our destiny. But the current crop of reproductive techniques - artificial insemination, in vitro fertilization, embryo transfer, frozen embryos, gamete interfallopian transfer, embryo biopsy - leaves us capable of little more than scratching our collective moral head as we decide how those advances should be used, who should have access to them and how we should readjust our notions of parenthood and family
PROQUEST:244138768
ISSN: 0828-1815
CID: 1487682