•  39
    Military Medical Ethics for the 21st Century (edited book)
    with Don Carrick
    Ashgate. 2012.
    Military Medical Ethics for the 21st Century is the first full length, broad-based treatment of this important subject. Written by an international team of practitioners and academics, this book provides interdisciplinary insights into the major issues facing military-medical decision makers and critically examines the tensions and dilemmas inherent in the military and medical professions. In this book the authors explore the practice of battlefield bioethics, medical neutrality and treatment of…Read more
  •  214
    Military Medical Ethics
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 22 (1): 92-109. 2013.
  •  172
    Teaching Military Medical Ethics: Another Look at Dual Loyalty and Triage
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 19 (4): 458-464. 2010.
    Military medical ethics is garnering growing attention today among medical personal in the American and other armies. Short courses or workshops in “battlefield ethics” for military physicians, nurses, medics, social workers, and psychologists address the nature of patient rights in the military, care for detainees, enemy soldiers and local civilians, problems posed by limited resources, ethical questions arising in humanitarian missions, as well as end-of-life issues, ethics consultations, care…Read more
  •  197
    Michael L. Gross replies
    Hastings Center Report 40 (5): 5-5. 2010.
  •  122
    Medicalized WEAPONS & Modern WAR
    Hastings Center Report 40 (1): 34-43. 2010.
    “Medicalized” weapons—those that rely on advances in neuroscience, physiology, and pharmacology—offer the prospect of reducing casualties and protecting civilians. They could be especially useful in modern asymmetric wars in which conventional states are pitted against guerrilla or insurgent forces. But may physicians and other medical workers participate in their development?
  •  161
    Competent patients who refuse life saving medical treatment present a dilemma for healthcare professionals. On one hand, respect for autonomy and liberty demand that physicians respect a patient’s decision to refuse treatment. However, it is often apparent that such patients are not fully competent. They may not adequately comprehend the benefits of medical care, be overly anxious about pain, or discount the value of their future state of health. Although most bioethicists are convinced that par…Read more
  •  186
    After Feticide: Coping with Late-Term Abortion in Israel, Western Europe, and the United States
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 8 (4): 449-462. 1999.
    Although the abortion debate continues to simmer in many places, the general issue of a woman's right to an abortion, at least in the Western democracies, is largely settled. In its place, the question of late-term abortion begins to assume a prominence only recently attributed to abortion itself. The advent of sophisticated fetal screening techniques makes possible detection of potentially severe fetal anomalies that in many cases are detected only late in the pregnancy, resulting in the need f…Read more
  •  187
    Physician-Assisted Draft Evasion: Civil Disobedience, Medicine, and War
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 14 (4): 444-454. 2005.
    From the first days of conscription, physicians have declared their opposition to unjust wars by using their good offices to aid draft evaders
  •  102
    Speaking in One Voice or Many? The Language of Community
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 13 (1): 28-33. 2004.
    Communities are the chief source of philosophical sloppiness these days. Varying endlessly across the entire range of human experience, communities raise the specter of moral relativism that makes ethics sometimes seem a misguided and futile enterprise. Yet the language of communities and their multitude of norms, preferences, and principles present an opportunity, and challenge, to confront abiding moral problems in immeasurably richer and more novel ways. But neither the opportunities nor the …Read more
  •  81
    Response to open Peer commentaries on “why treat the wounded?”
    American Journal of Bioethics 8 (2). 2008.
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  150
    Because the goal of military medicine is salvaging the wounded who can return to duty, military medical ethics cannot easily defend devoting scarce resources to those so badly injured that they cannot return to duty. Instead, arguments turn to morale and political obligation to justify care for the seriously wounded. Neither argument is satisfactory. Care for the wounded is not necessary to maintain an army's morale. Nor is there any moral or logical connection between the right to health care (…Read more
  •  117
    Ethics, policy, and rare genetic disorders: The case of gaucher disease in Israel
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 23 (2): 151-170. 2002.
    Gaucher disease is a rare, chronic,ethnic-specific genetic disorder affecting Jewsof Eastern European descent. It is extremelyexpensive to treat and presents difficultdilemmas for officials and patients in Israelwhere many patients live. First, high-cost,high-benefit, but low volume treatment forGaucher creates severe allocation dilemmas forpolicy makers. Allocation policies driven bycost effectiveness, age, opportunity or needmake it difficult to justify funding. Processoriented decision making…Read more
  •  128
    ABSTRACT How should physicians act when faced with corporal punishment, such as amputation, or torture? In most cases, the answer is clear: international law, UN resolutions and universal codes of medical ethics absolutely forbid physicians from countenancing torture and corporal punishment in any form. An acute problem arises, however, in decent societies, but not necessarily liberal states, that are, nonetheless, welcome in the world community. The decent society is often governed, in whole or…Read more
  •  144
    Abortion, particularly late‐term abortion, and neonaticide, selective non‐treatment of newborns, are feasible management strategies for fetuses or newborns diagnosed with severe abnormalities. However, policy varies considerably among developed nations. This article examines abortion and neonatal policy in four nations: Israel, the US, the UK and Denmark. In Israel, late‐term abortion is permitted while non‐treatment of newborns is prohibited. In the US, on the other hand, late‐term abortion is …Read more
  •  55
    The Israeli Patient Rights Act attempts to accommodate personal autonomy within an avowedly paternalist communitarian state. Although Israel is still groping toward a solution, the legislation begins to show the different form a communitarian version of autonomy must take.
  •  679
    How Do We Justify Research into Enhanced Warfighters?
    Journal of Law and the Biosciences 11 (2): 1-13. 2024.
    State militaries have strong interests in developing enhanced warfighters: taking otherwise healthy service personnel (soldiers, marines, pilots, etc.) and pushing their biological, physiological, and cognitive capacities beyond their individual statistical or baseline norm. However, the ethical and regulatory challenges of justifying research into these kinds of interventions to demonstrate the efficacy and safety of enhancements in the military has not been well explored. In this paper, we off…Read more
  •  28
    The Custom-Made Child?: Women-Centered Perspectives
    with Helen B. Holmes and Betty B. Hoskins
    Humana Press. 1981.
    Women most fully experience the consequences of human reproductive technologies. Men who convene to evaluate such technologies discuss "them": the women who must accept, avoid, or even resist these technologies; the women who consume technologies they did not devise; the women who are the objects of policies made by men. So often the input of women is neither sought nor listened to. The privileged insights and perspectives that women bring to the consideration of technologies in human reproducti…Read more
  •  46
    Soft War: The Ethics of Unarmed Conflict
    with Tamar Meisels
    Cambridge University Press. 2017.
    Just war theory focuses primarily on bodily harm, such as killing, maiming, and torture, while other harms are often largely overlooked. At the same time, contemporary international conflicts increasingly involve the use of unarmed tactics, employing 'softer' alternatives or supplements to kinetic power that have not been sufficiently addressed by the ethics of war or international law. Soft war tactics include cyber-warfare and economic sanctions, media warfare, and propaganda, as well as non-v…Read more