•  50
    Lessons from the Injured Brain: A Bioethicist in the Vineyards of Neuroscience
    Cambridge 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
  •  6
    In Remembrance, with Thanks to Voltaire
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 25 (1): 108-110. 2016.
  •  12
    Case Study: Removing the Mask
    with Gere B. Fulton
    Hastings Center Report 33 (2): 12. 2003.
  •  6
    Distinguishing Professionalism and Heroism When Disaster Strikes
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 24 (4): 373-384. 2015.
  •  62
  •  4
    The Authors Reply
    with Meredith Stark
    Hastings 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.
  •  29
    Conflicts of Interest in Deep Brain Stimulation Research and the Ethics of Transparency
    with Nicholas D. Schiff
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 21 (2): 125-132. 2010.
    In this article we will draw on experiences from our own research on deep brain stimulation of the central thalamus in the minimally conscious state. We describe ethical challenges faced in clinical research involving medical devices and offer several cautionary notes about its funding and the interplay of market forces and scientific inquiry and suggest some reforms.
  •  5
    Praxis Makes Perfect?
    Hastings Center Report 23 (5): 16-19. 1993.
    Hospital formulary committees blend cost‐effectiveness analysis, peer review, and continuing medical education to regulate hospital drug purchases and physicians' prescribing patterns in ways that may be instructive to the societal debate on health care reform.
  •  97
    Death, dying and informatics: misrepresenting religion on MedLine (review)
    with Pablo Rodríguez del Pozo
    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
  •  58
    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...
  •  31
    Reinvigorating ethics consultations: An impetus from the “quality” debate (review)
    with Elizabeth G. Nilson
    HEC Forum 18 (4): 298-304. 2006.
  •  45
    Baseball and Bioethics
    Cambridge 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
  •  24
    In Defense of Bioethics and the Humanities
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 20 (4): 615-616. 2011.