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188Acknowledging awareness: informing families of individual research results for patients in the vegetative stateJournal of Medical Ethics 41 (7): 534-538. 2015.
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129A Misunderstanding Concerning FutilityAmerican Journal of Bioethics 15 (7): 59-60. 2015.It is a comment on Geppert about the concept of futility in cases of treatment-resistant anorexia nervosa.
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97The Ottawa statement on the ethical design and conduct of cluster randomized trials: A short reportResearch Ethics 10 (2): 77-85. 2014.Owing to unique features of their design, cluster randomized trials complicate the interpretation of standard ethics guidelines. The recently published Ottawa statement on the ethical design and conduct of cluster randomized trials provides researchers and research ethics committees with detailed guidance on the design, conduct and review of cluster trials. The Ottawa statement sets out 15 recommendations, including guidance on the justification of study design, the need for research ethics comm…Read more
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141Ethics of neuroimaging after serious brain injuryBMC Medical Ethics 15 (1): 41. 2014.Patient outcome after serious brain injury is highly variable. Following a period of coma, some patients recover while others progress into a vegetative state (unresponsive wakefulness syndrome) or minimally conscious state. In both cases, assessment is difficult and misdiagnosis may be as high as 43%. Recent advances in neuroimaging suggest a solution. Both functional magnetic resonance imaging and electroencephalography have been used to detect residual cognitive function in vegetative and min…Read more
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192Assay Sensitivity and the Epistemic Contexts of Clinical TrialsPerspectives in Biology and Medicine 56 (1): 1-17. 2013.In February 2010, the World Medical Association hosted an international symposium on the ethics of placebo controls in clinical trials (WMA 2010). Despite years of debate, ethicists, clinical trialists, and policy makers remain divided over the ethical acceptability of using placebos in research when a proven, effective treatment is available. The protracted nature of this problem is due, at least in part, to a perceived conflict between the opposing demands placed on clinical research by scienc…Read more
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149Ethics, economics and the regulation and adoption of new medical devices: case studies in pelvic floor surgeryBMC Medical Ethics 11 (1): 14-. 2010.Background: Concern has been growing in the academic literature and popular media about the licensing, introduction and adoption of surgical devices before full effectiveness and safety evidence is available to inform clinical practice. Our research will seek empirical survey evidence about the roles, responsibilities, and information and policy needs of the key stakeholders in the introduction into clinical practice of new surgical devices for pelvic floor surgery, in terms of the underlying et…Read more
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42Demands by Patients or their Families for treatment thought to be inappropriate by health care providers constitute an important set of moral problems in clinical practice. A variety of approaches to such cases have been described in the literature, including medical futility, standard of care and negotiation. Medical futility fails because it confounds morally distinct cases: demand for an ineffective treatment and demand for an effective treatment that supports a controversial end (e.g., perma…Read more
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73OBJECTIVE: To describe the issues faced, and how they were addressed, by the University of Toronto Critical Care Medicine Program/Joint Centre for Bioethics Task Force on Appropriate Use of Life-Sustaining Treatment. The clinical problem addressed by the Task Force was dealing with requests by patients or substitute decision makers for life-sustaining treatment that their healthcare providers believe is inappropriate. DESIGN: Case study. SETTING: The University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioeth…Read more
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213Unethical Author AttributionCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 12 (1): 124-130. 2003.I am an M.D/Ph.D. student and work as a research assistant for the director of a division of the school of medicine who is an M.D. He assigned me to research a certain topic and gave me no guidelines or guidance as to how to do it. Nevertheless, I did the research and wrote it up. My supervisor liked the report and said that he thought it was so good that “I would like to offer you the opportunity to publish it and list you as the primary author.” Some bells went off when he so grandly offered t…Read more
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28This presentation addresses these questions: • “Upon what ethical grounds may the physician offer RCT enrollment to a patient?” • Which is the preferred moral basis of the RCT?
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University of Western OntarioDepartment of Philosophy
Department of Epidemiology and BiostatisticsProfessor -
London, Ontario, Canada
Areas of Specialization
| Biomedical Ethics |
| Medical Research Ethics |