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74Can Physician-Assisted Suicide Be Regulated Effectively?Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 24 (3): 225-232. 1996.With breathtalung speed, traditional criminal prohibitions against assisted suicide have been declared unconstitutional in twelve states, including California and New York. This poses great promise and great peril. The promise is that competent terminally ill patients, as a compassionate measure of last resort, will have the option of putting an end to their suffering by physician-assisted suicide. More sigmficant, legally permitting this controversial option may be a catalyst for doctors, healt…Read more
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124Research on Medical Records without Informed ConsentJournal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (3): 560-566. 2008.Research drawn from data contained in medical records is a common and immensely important means of scientific investigation in epidemiology and health services research. It provides valuable knowledge regarding risk factors for disease, the safety of pharmaceuticals and medical procedures, and the quality of medical care. Electronic information technology has greatly enhanced the capability of conducting research using medical records, but it has also generated increasing concern about invasions…Read more
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70An apology for socratic bioethicsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 8 (7). 2008.Bioethics is a hybrid discipline. As a theoretical enterprise it stands for untrammeled inquiry and argument. Yet it aims to influence medical practice and policy. In this article we explore tensions between these two dimensions of bioethics and examine the merits and perils of a “Socratic” approach to bioethics that challenges “the conventional wisdom.”.
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97On AuthorshipAmerican Journal of Bioethics 11 (10). 2011.The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 11, Issue 10, Page 32-33, October 2011
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80Mapping the Moral Terrain of Clinical ResearchHastings Center Report 38 (2): 30-42. 2012.Medical research is widely thought to have a fundamentally therapeutic orientation, in spite of the fact that clinical research is thought to be ethically distinct from medical care. We need an entirely new conception of clinical research ethics—one that looks to science instead of the doctor‐patient relationship.
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192What makes placebo-controlled trials unethical?American Journal of Bioethics 2 (2). 2002.The leading ethical position on placebo-controlled clinical trials is that whenever proven effective treatment exists for a given condition, it is unethical to test a new treatment for that condition against placebo. Invoking the principle of clinical equipoise, opponents of placebo-controlled trials in the face of proven effective treatment argue that they (1) violate the therapeutic obligation of physicians to offer optimal medical care and (2) lack both scientific and clinical merit. We conte…Read more
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280Cosmetic Surgery and the Internal Morality of MedicineCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 9 (3): 353-364. 2000.Cosmetic surgery is a fast-growing medical practice. In 1997 surgeons in the United States performed the four most common cosmetic procedures443,728 times, an increase of 150% over the comparable total for 1992. Estimated total expenditures for cosmetic surgery range from $1 to $2 billion. As managed care cuts into physicians' income and autonomy, cosmetic surgery, which is not covered by health insurance, offers a financially attractive medical specialty
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74Going All the Way: Ethical Clarity and Ethical ProgressAmerican Journal of Bioethics 12 (6): 10-11. 2012.The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 12, Issue 6, Page 10-11, June 2012
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138The concept of medically indicated treatmentJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 18 (1): 91-98. 1993.The following article examines critically Robert Veaten's argument that respect for patient autonomy invalidates the concept of medically indicated treatment. I contend that when judgments of medically indicated treatment are distinguished from what ought to be done in a given case, all things considered, they are compatible with patient autonomy. Yet there remains a significant danger, which needs to be guarded against, that physicians will use these judgments to dominate their interactions wit…Read more
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76Does research ethics rest on a mistake?American Journal of Bioethics 5 (1). 2005.This Article does not have an abstract
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124Death, Dying, and Organ Donation: Reconstructing Medical Ethics at the End of LifeOxford University Press. 2011.This book challenges fundamental doctrines of established medical ethics. It is argued that the routine practice of stopping life support technology causes the death of patients and that donors of vital organs (hearts, liver, lungs, and both kidneys) are not really dead at the time that their organs are removed for life-saving transplantation. Although these practices are ethically legitimate, they are not compatible with traditional medical ethics: they conflict with the norms that doctors must…Read more
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76A Response to Commentators on "Sham Surgery: An Ethical Analysis"American Journal of Bioethics 3 (4): 36-36. 2003.
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Placebo-Controlled Trials in Psychiatric ResearchIn Stephen A. Green & Sidney Bloch (eds.), An anthology of psychiatric ethics, Oxford University Press. pp. 47--472. 2006.
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281Misconceptions about coercion and undue influence: Reflections on the views of irb membersBioethics 27 (9): 500-507. 2012.Payment to recruit research subjects is a common practice but raises ethical concerns relating to the potential for coercion or undue influence. We conducted the first national study of IRB members and human subjects protection professionals to explore attitudes as to whether and why payment of research participants constitutes coercion or undue influence. Upon critical evaluation of the cogency of ethical concerns regarding payment, as reflected in our survey results, we found expansive or inco…Read more
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149Brain death: justifications and critiquesClinical Ethics 7 (3): 128-132. 2012.Controversies about the diagnosis and meaning of brain death have existed as long as the concept itself. Here we review the historical development of brain death, and then evaluate the various attempts to justify the claim that patients who are diagnosed as brain dead can be considered dead for all legal and social purposes, and especially with regard to procuring their vital organs for transplantation. While we agree with most commentators that death should be defined as the loss of integration…Read more
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326The Incoherence of Determining Death by Neurological Criteria: Reply to John LizzaKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 19 (4): 397-399. 2009.Human life and death should be defined biologically. It is important not to conflate the definition of death with the criteria for when it has occurred. What is distinctively "human" from a scientific or normative perspective has nothing to do with what makes humans alive or dead. We are biological organisms, despite the fact that what is meaningful about human life is not defined in biological terms. Consequently, as in the rest of the realm of living beings, human beings die when they no longe…Read more
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188The internal morality of medicine: An evolutionary perspectiveJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 26 (6). 2001.A basic question of medical ethics is whether the norms governing medical practice should be understood as the application of principles and rules of the common morality to medicine or whether some of these norms are internal or proper to medicine. In this article we describe and defend an evolutionary perspective on the internal morality of medicine that is defined in terms of the goals of clinical medicine and a set of duties that constrain medical practice in pursuit of these goals. This pers…Read more
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187Clinical pragmatism: A method of moral problem solvingKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 7 (2): 129-143. 1997.: This paper presents a method of moral problem solving in clinical practice that is inspired by the philosophy of John Dewey. This method, called "clinical pragmatism," integrates clinical and ethical decision making. Clinical pragmatism focuses on the interpersonal processes of assessment and consensus formation as well as the ethical analysis of relevant moral considerations. The steps in this method are delineated and then illustrated through a detailed case study. The implications of clinic…Read more
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172Evaluating the therapeutic misconceptionKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 16 (4): 353-366. 2006.: The "therapeutic misconception," described by Paul Appelbaum and colleagues more than 20 years ago, refers to the tendency of participants in clinical trials to confuse the design and conduct of research with personalized medical care. Although the "therapeutic misconception" has become a term of art in research ethics, little systematic attention has been devoted to the ethical significance of this phenomenon. This article examines critically the way in which Appelbaum and colleagues formulat…Read more
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93Striking the Right Balance in Research Ethics and RegulationAmerican Journal of Bioethics 10 (8): 65-65. 2010.This Article does not have an abstract
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170A plea for pragmatism in clinical research ethicsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 8 (4). 2008.Pragmatism is a distinctive approach to clinical research ethics that can guide bioethicists and members of institutional review boards (IRBs) as they struggle to balance the competing values of promoting medical research and protecting human subjects participating in it. After defining our understanding of pragmatism in the setting of clinical research ethics, we show how a pragmatic approach can provide guidance not only for the day-to-day functioning of the IRB, but also for evaluation of pol…Read more
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122Clinical Research before Informed ConsentKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 24 (2): 141-157. 2014.The results of the first randomized controlled trial of a medical treatment were reported in 1947. The antibiotic streptomycin was demonstrated to be dramatically superior to bed rest alone in treating tuberculosis. Looking back on this trial in 1990, A. B. Hill, the distinguished medical statistician who played a prominent role in the use of randomization in this study, made a telling statement about the moral climate of clinical research at the time: "Of course, there were no ethical problems …Read more
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23Recruiting Research ParticipantsIn Ezekiel J. Emanuel (ed.), The Oxford textbook of clinical research ethics, Oxford University Press. pp. 397. 2008.
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114A Critique of Clinical Equipoise: Therapeutic Misconception in the Ethics of Clinical TrialsHastings Center Report 33 (3): 19-28. 2003.A predominant ethical view holds that physician‐investigators should conduct their research with therapeutic intent. And since a physician offering a therapy wouldn't prescribe second‐rate treatments, the experimental intervention and the best proven therapy should appear equally effective. "Clinical equipoise" is necessary. But this perspective is flawed. The ethics of research and of therapy are fundamentally different, and clinical equipoise should be abandoned.
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125Personal Care in Learning Health Care SystemsKennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 25 (4): 419-435. 2015.The “learning health care system” is being heralded as offering great potential for improving the quality and cost-worthiness of medical care by closely integrating the care of patients with the accumulation of aggregate data that can guide evidence-based medicine. By using electronic medical records, routine patient care and administrative data will be available for systematic observational studies. With the aid of these electronic medical records, quality-improvement studies of institutional p…Read more
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102When Scientists Deceive: Applying the Federal RegulationsJournal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 37 (2): 344-350. 2009.Deception is a useful methodological device for studying attitudes and behavior, but deceptive studies fail to fulfill the informed consent requirements in the U.S. federal regulations. This means that before they can be approved by Institutional Review Boards, they must satisfy the four regulatory conditions for a waiver or alteration of these requirements. To illustrate our interpretation, we apply the conditions to a recent study that used deception to show that subjects judged the same wine …Read more
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |