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154Philosophical challenges in teaching bioethics: The importance of professional medical ethics and its history for bioethicsJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 27 (4). 2002.The papers in this number of the Journal originated in a session sponsored by the American Philosophical Association's Committee on Philosophy and Medicine in 1999. The four papers and two commentaries identify and address philosophical challenges of how we should understand and teach bioethics in the liberal arts and health professions settings. In the course of introducing the six papers, this article explores themes these papers raise, especially the relationship among professional medical et…Read more
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108Response to commentaries on “patient autonomy for the management of chronic conditions: A two-component re-conceptualization”American Journal of Bioethics 9 (2). 2009.The clinical application of the concept of patient autonomy has centered on the ability to deliberate and make treatment decisions to the virtual exclusion of the capacity to execute the treatment plan. However, the one-component concept of autonomy is problematic in the context of multiple chronic conditions. Adherence to complex treatments commonly breaks down when patients have functional, educational, and cognitive barriers that impair their capacity to plan, sequence, and carry out tasks as…Read more
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28A methodology for teaching ethics in the clinical setting: A clinical handbook for medical ethicsTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics 15 (1). 1994.The pluralism of methodologies and severe time constraints pose important challenges to pedagogy in clinical ethics. We designed a step-by-step student handbook to operate within such constraints and to respect the methodological pluralism of bioethics and clinical ethics. The handbook comprises six steps: Step 1: What are the facts of the case?; Step 2: What are your obligations to your patient?; Step 3: What are your obligations to third parties to your relationship with the patient?; Step 4: …Read more
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114Medicine as a Profession: A Hypothetical Imperative in Clinical EthicsJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 40 (1): 1-7. 2015.
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31""Taking seriously the" what then?" question: an ethical framework for the responsible management of medical disastersJournal of Clinical Ethics 21 (4): 321-327. 2010.When healthcare resources become overwhelmed in medical disasters, as they inevitably will, we have to ask, in an unflinching fashion, the question: “What then?” or more precisely, “What should we do when we run out of resources?” In a mass casualty event worthy of the designation, we will indeed run out of resources, perhaps quite quickly. This article provides an ethical framework for the responsible management of medical disasters in which the “What then?” question must be asked. The framewor…Read more
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144A Case Study in Unethical Transgressive Bioethics: “Letter of Concern from Bioethicists” About the Prenatal Administration of DexamethasoneAmerican Journal of Bioethics 10 (9): 35-45. 2010.On February 3, 2010, a “Letter of Concern from Bioethicists,” organized by fetaldex.org, was sent to report suspected violations of the ethics of human subjects research in the off-label use of dexamethasone during pregnancy by Dr. Maria New. Copies of this letter were submitted to the FDA Office of Pediatric Therapeutics, the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) Office for Human Research Protections, and three universities where Dr. New has held or holds appointments. We provide a cri…Read more
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59John Gregory (1724 - 1773) and the Invention of Professional Relationships in MedicineJournal of Clinical Ethics 8 (1): 11-21. 1997.
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134The critical turn in clinical ethics and its continous enhancementJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 30 (1). 2005.Taking the critical turn is one of the main tools of the humanities and inculcates an intellectual discipline that prevents ossification of thinking about issues and of organizational policies in clinical ethics. The articles in this "Clinical Ethics" number of the Journal take the critical turn with respect to cherished ways of thinking in Western clinical ethics, life extension, the clinical determination of death, physicians' duty to treat even at personal risk, clinical ethics at the interfa…Read more
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85Justified Limits on Refusing InterventionHastings Center Report 21 (2): 12-18. 1991.Physicians may justifiably limit patients' refusals of medical interventions when the refusal is based on a negative right to noninterference coupled with a request for an unreasonable alternative.
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96Finely crafted distinctions and the art of clinical ethicsJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 26 (1). 2001.Making finely crafted distinctions and deploying them in intellectually rigorous and clinically applicable judgments define, to a considerable degree, the art of clinical ethics. The papers in this Clinical Ethics number of the Journal of Medicine and Philosophy demonstrate the art of clinical ethics in their consideration of respect for autonomy vs. respect for persons, the role of risk in triggering assessment of decisional capacity vs. the role of risk in the concept and assessment of decisio…Read more
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81Reification and synergy in clinical ethics and its adequacy to the managed practice of medicineJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 21 (1): 1-6. 1996.
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160Physicians' silent decisions: Because patient autonomy does not always come firstAmerican Journal of Bioethics 7 (7). 2007.Physicians make some medical decisions without disclosure to their patients. Nondisclosure is possible because these are silent decisions to refrain from screening, diagnostic or therapeutic interventions. Nondisclosure is ethically permissible when the usual presumption that the patient should be involved in decisions is defeated by considerations of clinical utility or patient emotional and physical well-being. Some silent decisions - not all - are ethically justified by this standard. Justifi…Read more
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153Constructing a systematic review for argument-based clinical ethics literature: The example of concealed medicationsJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 32 (1). 2007.The clinical ethics literature is striking for the absence of an important genre of scholarship that is common to the literature of clinical medicine: systematic reviews. As a consequence, the field of clinical ethics lacks the internal, corrective effect of review articles that are designed to reduce potential bias. This article inaugurates a new section of the annual "Clinical Ethics" issue of the Journal of Medicine and Philosophy on systematic reviews. Using recently articulated standards fo…Read more
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130Respect as an organizing normative category for research ethicsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 5 (1). 2005.Rosamond Rhodes calls for a reconceptualization of research ethics and a fundamental shift in attitude toward both research subjects and scientific investigators. She recognizes the limits of the e...
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148A basic concept in the clinical ethics of managed care: Physicians and institutions as economically disciplined moral co-fiduciaries of populations of patientsJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 24 (1). 1999.Managed care employs two business tools of managed practice that raise important ethical issues: paying physicians in ways that impose conflicts of interest on them; and regulating physicians' clinical judgment, decision making, and behavior. The literature on the clinical ethics of managed care has begun to develop rapidly in the past several years. Professional organizations of physicians have made important contributions to this literature. The statements on ethical issues in managed care of …Read more
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229On February 3, 2010, a “Letter of Concern from Bioethicists,” organized by fetaldex.org, was sent to report suspected violations of the ethics of human subjects research in the off-label use of dexamethasone during pregnancy by Dr. Maria New. Copies of this letter were submitted to the FDA Office of Pediatric Therapeutics, the Department of Health and Human Services Office for Human Research Protections, and three universities where Dr. New has held or holds appointments. We provide a critical a…Read more
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75The Professional Responsibility Model of Respect for Autonomy in Decision Making About Cesarean DeliveryAmerican Journal of Bioethics 12 (7): 1-2. 2012.
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69Holding the present and future accountable to the past: History and the maturation of clinical ethics as a field of the humanitiesJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 25 (1). 2000.Clinical ethics, like bioethics more generally, until recently has tended to focus on the present and future, with little attention to the history of moral thought about health care that preceded bioethics. As a consequence, clinical ethics and bioethics lack maturity as fields of the humanities. The papers in this year's clinical ethics issue of the Journal put contemporary clinical ethics in critical dialogue with the past, making the former accountable to the latter. The six papers in this is…Read more
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93Should we create a health care system in the united states?Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 19 (5): 483-490. 1994.An orthodoxy has arisen which claims that there is a crisis in the United States health care system such that the system needs to be reformed. This essay challenges that orthodoxy by showing that we do not have a health care system in the United States. We have a non-system of health care, just as we do for virtually all basic social institutions. Challenging the current orthodoxy surfaces two ethical issues that have been ignored: creating a health care system will (a) cause resurgent paternali…Read more
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100Professionally Responsible Clinical Ethical Judgments of FutilityAmerican Journal of Bioethics 15 (8): 54-56. 2015.
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89Ethical dimensions of diagnosis: A case study and analysisTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics 2 (2): 129-143. 1987.A rational reconstruction of the role of moral values in diagnostic reasoning is undertaken. In the context of a case study it is shown how value and ethical considerations come into play in the complex course of making diagnostic and therapeutic decisions.
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74Preventive ethics, managed practice, and the hospital ethics committee as a resource for physician executivesHEC Forum 10 (2): 136-151. 1998.
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53Pediatric Cancer Genetics Research and an Evolving Preventive Ethics Approach for Return of Results after Death of the SubjectJournal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (3): 529-537. 2015.The return of genetic research results after death in the pediatric setting comes with unique complexities. Researchers must determine which results and through which processes results are returned. This paper discusses the experience over 15 years in pediatric cancer genetics research of returning research results after the death of a child and proposes a preventive ethics approach to protocol development in order to improve the quality of return of results in pediatric genomic settings
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117A transcultural, preventive ethics approach to critical-care medicine: Restoring the critical care physician's power and authorityJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 23 (6). 1998.This article comments on the treatment of critical-care ethics in four preceding articles about critical-care medicine and its ethical challenges in mainland China, Hong Kong, Japan, and the Philippines. These articles show how cultural values can be in both synchrony and conflict in generating these ethical challenges and in the constraints that they place on the response of critical-care ethics to them. To prevent ethical conflict in critical care the author proposes a two-step approach to the…Read more
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189Moral authority, power, and trust in clinical ethicsJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 24 (1). 1999.Moral concerns about the authority, power, and trustworthiness of physicians have become important topics in clinical ethics during the past three decades. These concerns have come to greater prominence with the increasing involvement of large-scale private institutions in the organization and delivery of medical services, especially managed care organizations, and with the increasing involvement of government in the payment for and organization and delivery of medical services. When physicians …Read more
APA Eastern Division
Houston, Texas, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |
| Biomedical Ethics |
| Medical Ethics |
| Reproductive Ethics |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |