External News

Lifesaving devices can cause havoc at life's end

Bioethics.net - Mon, 05/17/2010 - 5:11am
Should heart defibrillators be turned off when a person is at the end of his/her life?
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Are we getting TMI about the food we order?

Bioethics.net - Mon, 05/17/2010 - 5:08am
Does nutrition information on restaurant menus do more harm than good?
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When concretized emotion-belief complexes derail decision-making capacity

MedWorm: Medical Ethics - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 6:00pm
There is an important gap in philosophical, clinical and bioethical conceptions of decision-making capacity. These fields recognize that when traumatic life circumstances occur, people not only feel afraid and demoralized, but may develop catastrophic thinking and other beliefs that can lead to poor judgment. Yet there has been no articulation of the ways in which such beliefs may actually derail decision-making capacity. In particular, certain emotionally grounded beliefs are systematically unresponsive to evidence, and this can block the ability to deliberate about alternatives. People who meet medico-legal criteria for decision-making capacity can react to health and personal crises with such capacity-derailing reactions. One aspect of this is that a person who is otherwise cognitively ...
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Literature, history and the humanization of bioethics

MedWorm: Medical Ethics - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 6:00pm
This paper considers the disciplines of literature and history and the contributions each makes to the discourse of bioethics. In each case I note the pedagogic ends that can be enacted though the appropriate use of the each of these disciplines in the sphere of medical education, particularly in the medical ethics classroom.1 I then explore the contribution that both these disciplines and their respective methodologies can and do bring to the academic field of bioethics. I conclude with a brief consideration of the relations between literature and history with particular attention to the possibilities for a future bioethics informed by history and literature after the empirical turn. (Source: Bioethics)
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Trusted consent and research biobanks: towards a 'new alliance' between researchers and donors

MedWorm: Medical Ethics - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 6:00pm
We argue that, in the case of research biobanks, there is a need to replace the currently used informed consent with trusted consent. Accordingly, we introduce a proposal for the structure of the latter. Further, we discuss some of the issues that can be addressed effectively through our proposal. In particular, we illustrate: i) which research should be authorized by donors; ii) how to regulate access to information; iii) the fundamental role played by a Third Party Authority in assuring compliance with the reciprocal expectations and obligations of donors and scientists. Finally, we briefly analyse two issues that might represent important elements of a 'new alliance' between researchers and donors to which the trusted consent could pave the way: i) the correlations between needs and rig...

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Which benefits of research participation count as 'direct'?

MedWorm: Medical Ethics - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 6:00pm
It is widely held that individuals who are unable to provide informed consent should be enrolled in clinical research only when the risks are low, or the research offers them the prospect of direct benefit. There is now a rich literature on when the risks of clinical research are low enough to enroll individuals who cannot consent. Much less attention has focused on which benefits of research participation count as 'direct', and the few existing accounts disagree over how this crucial concept should be defined. This disagreement raises concern over whether those who cannot consent, including children and adults with severe dementia, are being adequately protected. The present paper attempts to address this concern by considering first what additional protections are needed for these vulner...
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Uninformed consent: mass screening for prostate cancer

MedWorm: Medical Ethics - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 6:00pm
While medicine may agree in principle that cancer screening requires informed consent, such consent is not, in fact, common practice. In the case of prostate-cancer screening this means that men in large numbers undergo PSA testing with little understanding of its liabilities [ndash] in particular, that it may or may not decrease mortality, often detects cancer of questionable significance, and may lead to unnecessary surgery. Given that prostate cancer is known to be overtreated and that family history is a risk factor, it follows that a man diagnosed with prostate cancer, even if it is of no clinical significance, automatically promotes his son into the high-risk category; and given that those so categorized are subject to heightened medical surveillance and that the more diligently medi...
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Reflections on 'autistic integrity'

MedWorm: Medical Ethics - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 6:00pm
This article has two goals: (1) to apply four familiar definitions or characterizations of integrity to the case of moderate to severe autism, and (2) to examine whether autistic integrity does provide the moral justification Barnbaum seeks. (Source: Bioethics)
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Experience: I Gave My Kidney to a Stranger

Bioethics.net - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 12:01pm
What to do when that "surplus organ" would seem put to better use in someone you don't know.
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Fertility Treatment Gets More Complicated

Bioethics.net - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 11:58am
What do infertile Jewish women need most? Eggs and surrogates of the same faith, of course!
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FDA “Right” on Genetic Testing Kit, Says Law Professor

Bioethics.net - Sun, 05/16/2010 - 11:55am
IU School of Law professor says FDA legal challenge to Pathway Genetics test is warranted. Why? Better to be on the cautious side.
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