Ethics Consultation: From Theory to Practice can be viewed both as prequel and sequel to the SHHV-SBC report. All but one of its 20 contributors were also members of the task force (the report itself is included as an appendix), and the book is organized by the kinds of questions that readers of the report might find interesting: "Foundational and Theoretical Questions," "Practical Questions," and "Questions on the Horizon." As might be expected on the basis of the task force membership, the list of contributors reads like a who's who in American bioethics and accurately reflects the diversity and breadth of those who are currently practicing bioethics in the United States—sociology, nursing, law, medicine, philosophy, psychiatry, and even the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations are all represented in this book. Thus in this single volume the reader will find a great deal of current information about ethics consultation, ranging from a ground-breaking position paper authorized by the major professional organization in the field (the report was reviewed and adopted by the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities [the successor to the SHHV, the SBC, and the American Association of Bioethics] on May 8, 1998) to in-depth analyses of some of the theoretical assumptions that provide the basis for ethics consultation as well as contributions that both review and extend several ongoing debates—for example, whether organizational ethics should be part of bioethics and whether ethics consultants should be licensed.