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The Annual Conference of the Health Care Ethics Consortium of Georgia

March 13-14, 2012

Emory University Center for Ethics, Atlanta, Georgia

"Mixed Messages: Ethical Tensions in Healthcare Conversations"

Keynote Speaker: Joanne Lynn, MD, MA, MS

Joanne Lynn, MD, MA (philosophy and public policy), MS (Evaluative Clinical Sciences), is a geriatrician, hospice physician, health services researcher, quality improvement advisor and policy advocate who has focused upon shaping American health care so that every person can count on living comfortably and meaningfully through the period of serious illness and disability in the last years of life at a sustainable cost to the community. She now leads the Center on Elder Care and Advanced Illness for the Altarum Institute.

Dr. Lynn has published more than 250 professional articles and her dozen books include The Handbook for Mortals, a Guide for the Public; The Common Sense Guide to Improving Palliative Care, an instruction manual for clinicians and managers seeking to improve quality; and Sick to Death and Not Going to Take it Any More!, an action guide for policymakers and advocates. She is a member of the Institute of Medicine and of the National Academy of Social Insurance, a fellow of the American Geriatrics Society and The Hastings Center, and a master of the American College of Physicians.

CONFERENCE INFORMATION

A draft Agenda for the Conference is attached below

Who Should Attend

Bioethics committee members, physicians, nurses, social workers, chaplains, psychologists, case managers, healthcare administrators, clergy, health law attorneys, mediators and others interested in healthcare.

Registration

HCECG Members: $200 both days/$120 single day - After Monday, March 5: $225 both days/$145 single day

Non-Members: $350 both days/$200 single day - After Monday, March 5: $375 both days/$225 single day

Students: $130 both days/$80 single day - After Monday, March 5: $155 both days/$105 single day  (Registration Form attached below).

Conference Location

Emory University Center for Ethics, 1531 Dickey Drive, Atlanta, GA 30322. Parking for the Conference will be available at the Peavine Visitor Parking Lot at a cost of approximately $10-12 per day.

Overnight Accommodations

Arrangements have been made with the Emory Conference Center - Emory Inn for rooms at a reduced rate during the conference (Please view attached Courtesy Room Rate Information Sheet below).  For information about the Emory Conference Center - Emory Inn, please visit their website at www.emoryconferencecenter.com or call 1-800-933-6679. The Conference Center and the Inn are partner hotels, with the Conference Center providing the higher-end accommodations. The hotel may provide shuttles between the hotel and the Center for Ethics.

You may also consider staying at the University Inn, 1767 North Decatur Road, Atlanta Georgia 30307. Please visit their website for more information www.univinn.com or call 1-800-654-8591.

Continuing Education

An application has been submitted to the Emory University School of Medicine. An application for continuing education hours for social workers has been submitted to NASW. An application has been submitted to the Georgia Nurses Association. A certificate of attendance will be provided to all participants. For information on CEU's please contact Deborah Cruze at 404-727-2279.

Student Scholarships

A limited number of scholarships are available to students enrolled in a related degree-granting program (Application Form attached below).

The Health Care Ethics Consortium of Georgia (HCECG) was founded in January 1994 following a three year planning period funded by Emory University and the Georgia Humanities Council. Clinicians and health administrators statewide participated in the formation of a network of health care organizations that shared a common interest in bringing ethics analysis to patient care and organizational issues. The membership is comprised of hospitals and health systems, home health agencies, hospices, long term care facilities, managed care organizations and rehabilitation centers. The Emory University's Center for Ethics houses and staffs the Consortium.

C. Michael Cassidy, President and CEO, Georgia Research Alliance, Atlanta

Render S. Davis, Co-Chair, Ethics Committee, Emory University Hospital and Midtown, Atlanta

Hilton Fuller, J.D., Retired Judge

Robert E. Hicks, J.D., Attorney at Law, Retired

Iqbal Khan, Ph.D., Professor & Assistant Dean, Medical College of GA, Albany

Father John Markham, M.D., Chaplain, St. Francis Cabrini, Savannah

Jackie Montag, Business Development, A. Montag & Associates, Atlanta

Stephen A. Norris, Director of Pastoral Care, South GA Medical Center, Valdosta

Tammie Quest, M.D., Assistant Professor, VA, Decatur

W. Thomas Reed, M.D., Retired Physician

DATE MEETING LOCATION TITLE
1994
9.24.94   Medical Center of Central Georgia, Macon Religious Beliefs and Clinical Ethics
10.19.94

Individual

Individuals may join HCECG at an annual fee of $75.

Affiliate Organization

Organizations that support healthcare or healthcare providers but do not provide direct patient care may join at an annual fee of $315.

Single Facility

Organizational membership affords HCECG membership benefits to all employees, so the fee structure is based on organizational size.

2000
2/24 - N Regional, Floyd Medical Center, Rome, Georgia, "Where Theory Meets Reality: Moral Reasoning in Clinical Ethics"

2000 Annual Conference
3/24-25
Simpsonwood Retreat Center, Norcross, Georgia, "Health Care Ethics: Disempowerment > Discontent > Dysfunction > Changing Healthcare Relationships: Tools for Responding Ethically"

2000 (continued)
9/13 - SE Regional, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia, "From Theory to Organizational Practice and Policy: Developing an End of Life Model of Care"
11/2 - SW Regional, John D. Archbold Memorial Hospital, Thomasville, Georgia, "From Theory to Organizational Practive and Policy: Developing an End of Life Model of Care"

2001
2/22 - N Regional, Kaiser Permanente, Atlanta, Georgia, "Corporate Compliance and Organizational Ethics"

2001 Annual Conference
5/22-23
Simpsonwood Retreat Center, Norcross, Georgia, "Ethics in a House Divided: Connecting Decsion Makers in Healthcare Organizations"

1531 Dickey Drive
Atlanta, Georgia 30322

 

Kathy Kinlaw: 404-727-2201 or kkinlaw@emory.edu
Dianne Becht: 404-727-9533 or dianne.becht@emory.edu

Directions to Emory University Center for Ethics

 

1. From the main entrance to Emory on North Decatur Road (at Emory Village, the intersection of Oxford Road and North Decatur), turn through the Emory gates into campus. You will be on a traffic circle/"roundabout" under construction. Continue to the left around the circle and then straight onto Dowman Drive which will take you by the main Administration Building and the B. Jones Center. Continue straight down the hill to the stop sign. Turn right on Eagle Row, which will fairly quickly make a turn toward the left. The Peavine Visitor Parking lot will be immediately on your left after the turn. When you exit the parking lot on foot you will turn right on Eagle Drive for a very short distance and then turn left on Dickey Drive. it is a short walk to the Center, which will be on your right at 1531 Dickey Drive. The Center is on the first floor.

 

* Yes
* No

On December 15th, Patricia Sweeney and Leonard Ortmann from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention presented a talk at the Ethics Center's monthly clinical seminar. Their topic was on the ethical dimensions of public health surveillance data in improving HIV care and reducing transmission. Because I'm not a specialist in this area, I was surprised to learn that of the 1.2 million Americans with HIV, only a third receive the standard of care treatment, whose centerpiece is anti-retroviral therapy (ART). The other two-thirds of the HIV population either do not or cannot avail themselves of ART, or don't know they're carrying the virus. This latter figure is heartbreaking in that ART is a monumental discovery in treating HIV--transforming it from the tragically lethal disease it was decades ago to a chronic illness that now allows those afflicted a good quality life. Furthermore, ART reduces the viral load of HIV and thus reduces its risk of transmission. Clearly, it is a win-win intervention.
What Patricia and Leonard discussed was the extent to which new public health surveillance data--that, for instance, notifies physicians who are treating persons with HIV that their patient hasn't had a checkup in over 6 months--could appear nonthreatening. The history of HIV, of course, is fraught with stigmatization and accompanying horror stories of patients losing their jobs, their health benefits, and their social networks because their health information was disclosed to persons who had neither a right nor need to know it. The challenge for new surveillance strategies to work--which largely involve data traveling from an initial diagnosis that is sent to a state data repository and then back to a treating professional or facility--is to continue to diminish the public's fear of the disease, its discriminatory potential, and deep seated anxieties about information sharing. 
Just as the extraordinary research efforts of the last 25 years in HIV treatment have recently witnessed astonishing success, let us hope we can realize the same in our educational efforts to bring social attitudes and behaviors in line with contemporary science and HIV therapy. It would constitute a sure win-win.
John Banja, PhD, is a Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine, a Medical Ethicist at the Center for Ethics and the Director, Section on Ethics In Research – Atlanta Clinical and Translational Science Institute Associate Editor.


John Banja

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