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Hosp Community Psychiatry 36:925-928, September 1985
© 1985 American Psychiatric Association
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Ethical Conflicts in Psychiatry: The Soviet Union Vs. the U.S

Paul Chodoff M.D.1

1 The George Washington University School of Medicine 1904 R Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20009

Dr. Eth's Introduction: From the selection ofa research priority to the choice of a treatment modality, mental health professionals are continuously making value judgments. However scientific clinicians have become, their decisions inevitably reflect a personal sense of right and wrong, good and bad. In addition, each therapist is embedded in a particular national system deeply committed to its own moral agenda. In this issue's ethics column, Dr. Paul Chodoff, an internationally distinguished ethics commentator, analyzes how the political and moral environments of the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. influence mental health practices in those countries.




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