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125In Defense of Bioethics and the HumanitiesCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 20 (4): 615-616. 2011.
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138Lessons from the Injured Brain: A Bioethicist in the Vineyards of NeuroscienceCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 18 (1): 7. 2009.I would like to share some reflections on how bioethics fosters dialogue between the sciences and humanities by talking a bit about my work as a physician-ethicist collaborating with neuroscientists studying severe brain injury and mechanisms of recovery. If I am successful in this Pilgrim's Progress, I hope I will convince you that the injured brain can teach us much about ourselves. It is not something I was prepared to believe as a medical student, when I was more certain of things than I am …Read more
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73What's Wrong with Evidence‐Based Medicine?Hastings Center Report 46 (1). 2016.Medicine in the last decades of the twentieth century was ripe for a data sweep that would bring systematic analysis to treatment strategies that seemingly had stood the test of time but were actually unvalidated. Coalescing under the banner of evidence-based medicine, this process has helped to standardize care, minimize error, and promote patient safety. But with this advancement, something of the art of medicine has been lost
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30Brain Injury and the Culture of Neglect: Musings on an Uncertain FutureSocial Research: An International Quarterly 78 (4): 731-746. 2011.Our essay will address both the right-to-die movement in America and the emerging culture of neglect in the treatment of a class of patients with disorders of consciousness with which the right-to-die movement is entwined. We trace the etiology of these two themes through changes in our scientific understanding of brain injury and recovery against a growing societal acculturation to dominion over one's self at life's end.
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86Review of Let Me Heal: The Opportunity to Preserve Excellence in American Medicine, by Kenneth M. Ludmerer (review)American Journal of Bioethics 16 (4): 14-15. 2016.
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85The Authors ReplyHastings Center Report 43 (6): 6-6. 2013.A response to a commentary by Howard Brody and Luana Colloca about “What's Not Being Shared in Shared Decision‐Making?” from the July‐August 2013.
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97Credentialing the Clinical Ethics Consultant: An Academic Medical Center Affirms Professionalism and PracticeJournal of Clinical Ethics 23 (2): 156-164. 2012.In response to national trends calling for increasing accountability and an emerging dialogue within bioethics, we describe an effort to credential clinical ethicists at a major academic medical center. This effort is placed within the historical context of prior calls for credentialing and certification and efforts currently underway within organized bioethics to engage this issue. The specific details, and conceptual rationale, behind the New York-Presbyterian Hospital’s graduated credentialin…Read more
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40On the Lingua Franca of Clinical EthicsJournal of Clinical Ethics 24 (4): 323-331. 2013.In this 25-year retrospective on the state of clinical ethics, and the anniversary of the founding of The Journal of Clinical Ethics, the author comments on the state of the field. He argues that the language of bioethics, as used in practice, seems dated and out of touch with a clinical reality marked by emerging technologies and the advent of new fields like palliative medicine.Reflecting on his experiences as a clinician and clinical ethicist, the author worries about the emergence of a shall…Read more
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276Death, dying and informatics: misrepresenting religion on MedLine (review)BMC Medical Ethics 6 (1): 1-5. 2005.Background The globalization of medical science carries for doctors worldwide a correlative duty to deepen their understanding of patients' cultural contexts and religious backgrounds, in order to satisfy each as a unique individual. To become better informed, practitioners may turn to MedLine, but it is unclear whether the information found there is an accurate representation of culture and religion. To test MedLine's representation of this field, we chose the topic of death and dying in the th…Read more
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83Reinvigorating ethics consultations: An impetus from the “quality” debate (review)HEC Forum 18 (4): 298-304. 2006.
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53Fee Disclosure at a CostHastings Center Report 44 (6): 3-3. 2014.A commentary on “Financial Side Effects: Why Patients Should Be Informed of Costs,” by Alicia Hall, in the May‐June 2014 issue.
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154Baseball and BioethicsCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 14 (4): 434-443. 2005.David and I were at a conference on Amelia Island in Florida back in 1995. The meeting, sponsored by the University of Florida, was entitled, “Physician-Assisted Death: Implications for Patients, Care Providers, and Society,” a title that seems quaint given the controversy over the right to die engendered by the Schiavo case. But that's a different talk for a different time
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67Guardianship and Clinical Research Participation: The Case of Wards with Disorders of ConsciousnessKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 27 (1): 43-70. 2017.Incapacitated adults with a legally appointed guardian or conservator may be recruited for or involved with medical, behavioral, or social science research. Much of the research in which such persons participate is aimed at evaluating medical interventions for them, or contributing to general knowledge about disorders from which they may suffer. In this paper we will consider how the appointment of guardians for patients with disorders of consciousness —severe brain injuries that affect a patien…Read more
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137A leg to stand on: Sir William Osler and Wilder penfield's "neuroethics"American Journal of Bioethics 8 (1). 2008.If ever I summon before me my highest ideals of men and medicine, I find them sprung from the spirit of Osler. —Wilder Penfield, M.D. Neuroethics is a recently coined term that is shaping our cultu...
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84Inching Toward Health Decision ExceptionalismAmerican Journal of Bioethics 13 (5): 18-19. 2013.No abstract
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194Neuroimaging and disorders of consciousness: Envisioning an ethical research agendaAmerican Journal of Bioethics 8 (9). 2008.The application of neuroimaging technology to the study of the injured brain has transformed how neuroscientists understand disorders of consciousness, such as the vegetative and minimally conscious states, and deepened our understanding of mechanisms of recovery. This scientific progress, and its potential clinical translation, provides an opportunity for ethical reflection. It was against this scientific backdrop that we convened a conference of leading investigators in neuroimaging, disorders…Read more
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19Guest Editorial: The Many Voices of Spanish Bioethics—An IntroductionCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 18 (3): 214-217. 2009.Edmund Pellegrino noted that contemporary medicine is to a large extent a North American product, and so too is the ethics that accompanies it. This was an accurate observation back in the 1980s when he said it. Even today bioethics is to a considerable extent informed by the seminal works of the Anglo-American model, at least seen from the United States. The dissemination of ideas from the Spanish-speaking world has been nearly invisible to the English-speaking world of bioethics, isolated by l…Read more
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132In Memoriam: Dr. Edmund Pellegrino's Legacy: Secure in the Annals of MedicineKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 24 (2): 97-104. 2014.I am honored to pay tribute to Dr. Pellegrino and a bit humbled as there are so many others who would want to have this opportunity and who knew Dr. Pellegrino better than I. Tom Beauchamp suggested that I might place Dr. Pellegrino into the broader context of the history of medicine. He wrote Thaddeus Pope:Without being disrespectful of the many celebrated figures from Hippocrates to Percival, my view is that no physician has been more productive in the field or made a greater contribution than…Read more
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130The economics of clinical ethics programs: a quantitative justificationCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 6 (4): 451-. 1997.The restructuring of the healthcare marketplace has exerted pressure directly and indirectly on clinical ethics programs. The fiscal orientation and emphasis on efficiency, outcome measures, and cost control have made it increasingly difficult to communicate arguments in support of the existence or growth of ethics programs. In the current marketplace, arguments that rely on the claim that ethics programs protect patient rights or assist in the professional formation of practitioners often resul…Read more
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63Care under the InfluenceHastings Center Report 47 (1): 8-9. 2017.A forty-year-old man is brought to the emergency room by his wife at five in the morning, two hours after he fell down the stairs at home, hitting his head and injuring his arm. He tells the ER physician that he got up to get a drink of water and tripped in the dark. His speech is slurred, and he smells strongly of alcohol. Lab results reveal elevated liver enzymes, and his blood alcohol level is 0.1. His medical history is unremarkable. When asked about his alcohol consumption, he says he usual…Read more
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147Shades of Gray: New Insights into the Vegetative StateHastings Center Report 36 (6): 8-8. 2006.
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96The Ethical Imperative to Think about ThinkingCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 23 (4): 386-396. 2014.Abstract:While the medical ethics literature has well explored the harm to patients, families, and the integrity of the profession in failing to disclose medical errors once they occur, less often addressed are the moral and professional obligations to take all available steps to prevent errors and harm in the first instance. As an expanding body of scholarship further elucidates the causes of medical error, including the considerable extent to which medical errors, particularly in diagnostics, …Read more
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Cornell UniversityRegular Faculty
Ithaca, New York, United States of America