Bruce Jennings

Vanderbilt University
Center for Humans and Nature
  • Vanderbilt University
    Department of Health Policy
    Associate Professor
  • Center for Humans and Nature
    Senior Fellow (Part-time)
  • The Hastings Center
    Senior Advisor (Part-time)
CV
Nashville, Tennessee, United States of America
  •  88
    Hospice Ethics: Policy and Practice in Palliative Care (edited book)
    with Timothy W. Kirk
    Oxford University Press. 2014.
    This book identifies and explores ethical themes in the structure and delivery of hospice care in the United States. As the fastest growing sector in the US healthcare system, in which over forty percent of patients who die each year receive care in their final weeks of life, hospice care presents complex ethical opportunities and challenges for patients, families, clinicians, and administrators. Thirteen original chapters, written by seventeen hospice experts, offer guidance and analysis that…Read more
  •  102
    Agency and moral relationship in dementia
    Metaphilosophy 40 (3-4): 425-437. 2009.
    This essay examines the goals of care and the exercise of guardianship authority in the long-term care of persons with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of chronic, progressive dementia. It counters philosophical views that deny both agency and personhood to individuals with Alzheimer's on definitional or analytic conceptual grounds. It develops a specific conception of the quality of life and offers a critique of hedonic conceptions of quality of life and models of guardianship that are based…Read more
  •  50
    The Limits of Moral Objectivity
    Hastings Center Report 19 (1): 19-20. 1989.
  •  126
    Pharmaceutical research involving the homeless
    with Tom L. Beauchamp, Eleanor D. Kinney, and Robert J. Levine
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 27 (5). 2002.
    Discussions of research involving vulnerable populations have left the homeless comparatively ignored. Participation by these subjects in drug studies has the potential to be upsetting, inconvenient, or unpleasant. Participation occasionally produces injury, health emergencies, and chronic health problems. Nonetheless, no ethical justification exists for the categorical exclusion of homeless persons from research. The appropriate framework for informed consent for these subjects of pharmaceutica…Read more
  •  154
    The further development of public health ethics will be assisted by a more direct engagement with political theory. In this way, the moral vocabulary of the liberal tradition should be supplemented—but not supplanted—by different conceptual and normative resources available from other traditions of political and social thought. This article discusses four lines of further development that the normative conceptual discourse of public health ethics might take. The relational turn. The implications…Read more
  •  38
    New Grass‐Roots Projects
    Hastings Center Report 16 (2): 6-7. 1986.
  •  18
    Contested terrain for competing visions of american liberalism
    In Catherine Myser (ed.), Bioethics Around the Globe, Oxford University Press. pp. 269. 2011.
  •  102
    Bioethics and Populism: How Should Our Field Respond?
    with Mildred Z. Solomon
    Hastings Center Report 47 (2): 11-16. 2017.
    Across the world, an authoritarian and exclusionary form of populism is gaining political traction. Historically, some populist movements have been democratic and based on a sense of inclusive justice and the common good. But the populism on the rise at present speaks and acts otherwise. It is challenging constitutional democracies. The polarization seen in authoritarian populism goes beyond the familiar left-right political spectrum and generates disturbing forms of extremism, including the so-…Read more
  •  105
    The Professions: Public Interest and Common Good
    with Daniel Callahan and Susan M. Wolf
    Hastings Center Report 17 (1): 3-10. 1987.
  •  43
    Cpr in hospice/commentary
    with Perry G. Fine
    Hastings Center Report 33 (3). 2003.
  •  24
    Traumatic Brain Injury and the Goals of Care
    Hastings Center Report 36 (2): 29-37. 2012.
    The appropriate goal of care for a person with a traumatic brain injury is rehabilitation in the broad, etymological sense of the word. The task is to bring the person back to the conditions of the living of a life. This requires the rehabilitation of the mind—the reconstruction of a subject.