•  63
    Robert Veatch’s Disrupted Dialogue and its implications for bioethics
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 43 (4): 221-233. 2022.
    In his Disrupted Dialogue: Medical Ethics and the Collapse of Physician-Humanist Communication Robert Veatch presents a scholarly tour de force of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Anglophone medical ethics to demonstrate how the easy communication between physicians and humanists in the Scottish Enlightenment progressively dissipated as medicine became detached from humanistic disciplines. In this paper I offer two comments—that the discourse of medical ethics in the Scottish Enlightenment was…Read more
  •  138
    Ethical considerations in the treatment of chronic psychosis in a periviable pregnancy
    with Michelle T. Nguyen, Eric Rafla-Yuan, Emily Boyd, Frank A. Chervenak, and Emily C. Dossett
    Clinical Ethics 18 (1): 113-119. 2023.
    Background: Treatment of psychotic disorders in pregnancy is often ethically and clinically challenging, especially when psychotic symptoms impair decision-making capacity. There are several competing ethical obligations to consider: the ethical obligation to maternal autonomy, the maternal and fetal beneficence-based obligations to treat peripartum psychosis, and the fetal beneficence-based obligation to minimize teratogenic exposure. Objective: This article outlines an ethical framework for cl…Read more
  •  31
    The best things in my Ufe have come to me by accident and this book results from one such accident: my having the opportunity, out of the blue, to go to work as H. Tristram Engelhardt, Jr. 's, research assistant at the Institute for the Medical Humanities in the University of Texas Medi cal Branch at Galveston, Texas, in 1974, on the recommendation of our teacher at the University of Texas at Austin, Irwin C. Lieb. During that summer Tris "lent" me to Chester Bums, who has done important schol a…Read more
  •  73
    Long Term Health Care: Providing a Spectrum of Services to the Aged
    with Rosalie A. Kane, Robert L. Kane, Philip W. Brickner, Anthony J. Lechich, Roberta Lipsman, and Linda K. Scharer
    Hastings Center Report 19 (5): 45. 1989.
    Book reviewed in this article: Long Term Care: Principles, Programs and Policies. By Rosalie A. Kane and Robert L. Kane. Long Term Health Care: providing a Spectrum of Services to the Aged. By Philip W. Brickner, Anthony J. Lechich, Roberta Lipsman, and Linda K. scharer.
  •  79
    In Response to COVID-19 Pandemic Physicians Already Know What to Do
    American Journal of Bioethics 20 (7): 9-12. 2020.
    Volume 20, Issue 7, July 2020, Page 9-12.
  •  83
    Beneficence and Wellbeing: A Critical Appraisal
    American Journal of Bioethics 20 (3): 65-68. 2020.
    Volume 20, Issue 3, March 2020, Page 65-68.
  •  99
    The ethical concept of medicine as a profession discovery or invention?
    Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (12): 786-787. 2019.
    Rosamond Rhodes makes a persuasive case for the view that medical ethics does not derive from common morality.1 Rhodes identifies the challenge that immediately arises and its corollary: Whence the origin of medical ethics? And, should we understand medical ethics as autonomous? From the perspective of professional ethics in medicine, the first question can now be restated: Whence the origin of the ethical concept of medicine as a profession, the basis of the ethical obligations of physicians in…Read more
  •  83
    Cases in Bioethics from the Hastings Center Report
    with Alastair Campbell, Roger Higgs, Colleen D. Clements, Carol Levine, and Robert M. Veatch
    Hastings Center Report 13 (5): 42. 1983.
    Book reviewed in this article: In That Case: Medical Ethics in Everyday Practice. By Alastair Campbell and Roger Higgs. Medical Genetics Casebook: A Clinical Introduction to Medical Ethics Systems Theory. By Colleen D. Clements. Cases in Bioethics from the Hastings Center Report. Edited by Carol Levine and Robert M. Veatch. Hastings‐on‐Hudson.
  •  60
    Case Studies in Bioethics: Is a Crisis of Conscience a Medical Problem?
    with Clarence Blomquist
    Hastings Center Report 6 (3): 26. 1976.
  •  69
    Ethics in Obstetrics and Gynecology
    with Joan C. Callahan and Frank A. Chervenak
    Hastings Center Report 26 (2): 45. 1996.
    Book reviewed in this article: Ethics in Obstetrics and Gynecology. By Laurence B. McCullough and Frank A. Chervenak.
  •  71
    Getting Past Words: Futility and the Professional Ethics of Life-Sustaining Treatment
    with Allan S. Brett
    Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 60 (3): 319-327. 2018.
    In this issue of Perspectives in Biology and Medicine, Schneiderman and colleagues critique a recent multi-society policy statement—developed by the American Thoracic Society and endorsed by four other organizations—entitled “Responding to Requests for Potentially Inappropriate Treatment in Intensive Care Units”. The focus of Schneiderman’s critique is the Multiorganization Policy Statement’s choice of the term “potentially inappropriate” to describe a class of interventions that clinicians shou…Read more
  •  28
    Historical Dictionary of Medical Ethics
    Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2018.
    This second edition of Historical Dictionary of Medical Ethics contains a chronology, an introduction, and an extensive bibliography. The dictionary section has over 1,000 cross-referenced entries on ethical reasoning and its key components; medical ethics, professional medical ethics, and bioethics; and topics in clinical ethics.
  •  38
    Surgical Ethics (edited book)
    with James Wilson Jones and Baruch A. Brody
    Oxford University Press USA. 1998.
    This is the first textbook of surgical ethics. It is a practical, clinically comprehenive, well-organized guide to ethical issues in surgical practice, research, and education written by leading figures in surgery and bioethics. The authors cover the surgeon-patient relationship, the full range of surgical patients, surgical education and research, and surgery and managed care. Their chapters are not abstract discussions of ethical principles; rather, they connect directly with the everyday conc…Read more
  •  44
    " Recovering the Traditions: Religious Perspectives in Medical Ethics
    with Baruch A. Brody, H. Tristram Engelhardt Jr, Elizabeth Heitman, B. Andrew Lustig, Gerald McKenny, Stuart F. Spieker, and Porter B. Storey
    Christian Bioethics 1 (2): 247. 1995.
  •  102
    Responsibly counselling women about the clinical management of pregnancies complicated by severe fetal anomalies
    with Frank Chervenak
    Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (7): 397-398. 2012.
    Heuser, Eller and Byrne provide important descriptive ethics data about how physicians counsel women on the clinical management of pregnancies complicated by severe fetal anomalies. The authors present an account of what such counselling ought to be based on, the ethical concept of the fetus as a patient and the professional responsibility model of obstetric ethics. When there is certainty about the diagnosis and either a very high probability of either death as the outcome of the anomaly or sur…Read more
  •  51
    Ethical dimensions of diagnosis: A case study and analysis
    with Charles E. Christianson
    Metamedicine 2 (2): 129-143. 1981.
    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.
  •  103
    Professional Responsibility to and for Patients and the Ethics of Health Policy
    American Journal of Bioethics 13 (8): 16-18. 2013.
    Nancy Jecker (2013) mounts a sustained and formidable critique of Norman Daniels's prudential lifespan account (PLA) as a reliable basis for justice between age groups in the responsible allocation...
  •  80
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Bioethics in the Twenty-First Century: Why We Should Pay Attention to Eighteenth-Century Medical EthicsLaurence B. McCullough (bio)Those of us who work in the field of bioethics tend to think that, because the word “bioethics” is new, so too the field is new in all respects, but we are not the first to do bioethics. John Gregory (1724–1773) did bioethics just as we do it, at least two centuries before we thought to do it (Gregory 177…Read more
  •  185
    A Philosophical Taxonomy of Ethically Significant Moral Distress
    with Tessy A. Thomas
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 40 (1): 102-120. 2015.
    Moral distress is one of the core topics of clinical ethics. Although there is a large and growing empirical literature on the psychological aspects of moral distress, scholars, and empirical investigators of moral distress have recently called for greater conceptual clarity. To meet this recognized need, we provide a philosophical taxonomy of the categories of what we call ethically significant moral distress: the judgment that one is not able, to differing degrees, to act on one’s moral knowle…Read more
  •  89
    The Accidental Bioethicist
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (4): 359-368. 2002.
    Albert Jonsen in The Birth of Bioethics notes that his career in bioethics began with a phone call to him from soon-to-be colleagues at the University of California at San Francisco Medical Center. Bioethics didn't begin with a bang but as an accident in the root sense—something that happened, not by necessity, but rather by chance. Indeed, the opening chapters of Jonsen's book chronicle a series of accidents that helped to create the field of bioethics. Principal among these was the fact that p…Read more
  •  141
    Methodological concerns in bioethics
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 11 (1): 17-37. 1986.
    Methodological concerns are moving to the top of the bioethics agenda for the next decade. This paper examines some of those concerns: (1) medical ethics as a subset of bioethics versus medical ethics as a subset of professional ethics; (2) a more in-depth examination of some methodological problems in treating medical ethics as professional ethics; (3) the senses in which bioethics constitutes an inquiry into secular undertakings in a pluralistic society; (4) ‘federal ethics’, the emergence to …Read more
  •  137
    This Article does not have an abstract
  •  93
    Laying clinical ethics open
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 18 (1): 1-8. 1993.
  •  64
  •  85
    Getting back to the fundamentals of clinical ethics
    Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 31 (1). 2006.
    This Article does not have an abstract