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E. Howe

San Diego State University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    116
    • Most Recent
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  •  News and Updates
    22

 More details
  • San Diego State University
    Department of Philosophy
    Undergraduate
San Diego, California, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
Philosophy of Mind
Philosophy of Cognitive Science
  • All publications (116)
  •  41
    Epilogue: Ethical Goals for the Future
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 25 (4): 323-332. 2014.
    Based on the experiences of the Hearts and Minds of Ghana authors, I present possible approaches to the ethical questions that clinicians who participate in health missions and disaster relief programs often face.
  •  62
    The best place for bare-knuckled ethics
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 24 (1): 3-10. 2013.
    In the documentary Boston Med, patients, their family members, and their careproviders agree to be filmed in real medical situations. Why would they do this? The possible answers to this question may help us to make sense of the paradoxical results of a recent study, in which patients with terminal illness ranked their careproviders highly for communication, even though the patients had failed to learn that they had a fatal illness. Based on this analysis, I offer careproviders a practical appro…Read more
    In the documentary Boston Med, patients, their family members, and their careproviders agree to be filmed in real medical situations. Why would they do this? The possible answers to this question may help us to make sense of the paradoxical results of a recent study, in which patients with terminal illness ranked their careproviders highly for communication, even though the patients had failed to learn that they had a fatal illness. Based on this analysis, I offer careproviders a practical approach they can use to improve communication with patients, particularly to help patients to feel less alone. This same approach can also be applied in bioethics consultation.
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  83
    Increasing consensus with patients and their loved ones
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 20 (1): 3-12. 2008.
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  68
    Should careproviders go ethically "off label"?
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 20 (4): 291-298. 2008.
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  73
    A possible application of care-based ethics to people with disabilities during a pandemic
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 21 (4): 275-283. 2010.
    Should people with exceptionally profound disabilities be given an equal chance of surviving a pandemic, even when their care might require a greater use of limited medical resources? How might an ethics of care be used to shape a policy regarding these patients?
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  55
    All careproviders need more opportunities to share their ethical concerns with others
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 21 (3): 179-188. 2010.
    Attention to the ethical concerns of healthcare aides can provide important information about patients’ needs to careproviders, improve the ethical environment of an institution, and benefit aides who suffer from bearing ethical concerns alone. All persons benefit from sharing their ethical concerns with others. Among other benefits, ethics consultation offers careproviders, caregivers, healthcare aides, patients, and patients’ loved ones an opportunity to have their concerns heard.John Fletcher…Read more
    Attention to the ethical concerns of healthcare aides can provide important information about patients’ needs to careproviders, improve the ethical environment of an institution, and benefit aides who suffer from bearing ethical concerns alone. All persons benefit from sharing their ethical concerns with others. Among other benefits, ethics consultation offers careproviders, caregivers, healthcare aides, patients, and patients’ loved ones an opportunity to have their concerns heard.John Fletcher tried to follow every ethics consultation with a debriefing for all participants, including patients and family members, to increase the possibility for continued healing after the conclusion of the consultation, and there are good reasons to follow this practice.
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  51
    "Third generation" ethics: what careproviders should do before they do ethics
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 21 (1): 3-13. 2010.
    The author suggests that a “first generation” task in bioethics is to give patients the information they need; a “second generation” task is to do this in the most effective way; and a “third generation” task is to avoid harming patients by imposing value biases. The author discusses ways to pursue this third generation task.
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  45
    Why Are They Boxing Us in Like This?
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 16 (2): 99-107. 2005.
    Ethics
  •  51
    Lessons from “Jay Carter”
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 14 (1-2): 109-117. 2003.
  •  34
    When Careproviders Should Give Advice, Disclose Personal Information, and Reveal Their Feelings
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 14 (1-2): 3-17. 2003.
  •  24
    Overcoming the Downside of Asymmetry
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 14 (3): 137-151. 2003.
  •  39
    What Research Practices in China May Teach the U.S
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 15 (1): 3-4. 2004.
    Ethics
  •  117
    Peter Singer and Beastiality
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 14 (4): 311-321. 2003.
    Ethics
  •  40
    Some New Paradigms for Ethics Consultants
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 15 (3): 211-222. 2004.
    Ethics
  •  57
    When Should Ethics Consultants Risk Giving their Personal Views?
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 16 (3): 183-192. 2005.
    Ethics
  •  55
    Criteria for Deceit
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 15 (2): 100-110. 2004.
  •  77
    Ethical challenges when patients have dementia
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 22 (3): 203-211. 2011.
    Dementia is among the most terrible diseases humans can have. Of all of the things that careproviders could do to enhance the quality of life that persons with dementia have, which ones should they do?
  •  39
    Allowing Patients to Find Meaning Where They Can
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 13 (3): 179-187. 2002.
  •  50
    Doing Ethics Consultations Better
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 11 (3): 195-205. 2000.
    General Issues in Applied EthicsAutonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  128
    Opening the word hoard
    with G. Bolton, N. Battye, A. Ellis, D. Gelipter, and J. McIlraith
    Medical Humanities 34 (1): 47-52. 2008.
    Commentator: Mark Purvis Commentator: Sheena McMain Commentator: Clare Connolly Commentator: Maggie Eisner Commentator: Shirley Brierley Commentator: Becky Ship.
    Medical Ethics
  •  76
    Review of Michael L. Gross. Bioethics and Armed Conflict/moral Dilemmas of Medicine and War.1 (review)
    American Journal of Bioethics 8 (10): 82-83. 2008.
  •  35
    Throwing Jello: A Primer on Helping Patients
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 17 (1): 2-14. 2006.
  •  45
    An explicit and reflective approach to the use of history to promote understanding of the nature of science
    with David W. Rudge
    Science & Education 18 (5): 561-580. 2009.
    Science, Logic, and Mathematics
  •  69
    Passion, Penance and the Pastoral
    Renascence 54 (3): 151-161. 2002.
  •  49
    Present Challenges in Decreasing the Time for IRB Research Reviews in the Military
    American Journal of Bioethics 16 (8): 53-54. 2016.
    Biomedical Ethics
  •  89
    Reflections on engaging the potentially “difficult” patient
    Medicolegal and Bioethics 7. forthcoming.
    Autonomy in Applied Ethics
  •  58
    Families, Strangers, and Those Most Alone: Insights from Cultures, Including Our Own
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 24 (4): 311-322. 2013.
    In this introduction to this issue of The Journal of Clinical Ethics (JCE), I will discuss the legacy of our recently departed friend and colleague, Edmund D. Pellegrino, MD. In this light, I will discuss three articles in this issue of the journal that provide insight into the cultures of China, Mexico, and the U.S., and propose alternative approaches for careproviders in the U.S. to include in their practice as they work with patients and family members at the end of life.
    EthicsAutonomy
  •  28
    Ethically Optimal Interventions with Impaired Patients
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 25 (1): 3-12. 2014.
    It may be difficult to imagine having a severe impairment such as quadriplegia or being dependent on a respirator. There is evidence that when careproviders make treatment decisions for patients who are in these situations, we imagine the patients are worse-off than they report they are—most patients with even very severe impairments report that they greatly value being alive.1 This misperception may cause us to make treatment decisions for patients with impairments that we might not make for ot…Read more
    It may be difficult to imagine having a severe impairment such as quadriplegia or being dependent on a respirator. There is evidence that when careproviders make treatment decisions for patients who are in these situations, we imagine the patients are worse-off than they report they are—most patients with even very severe impairments report that they greatly value being alive.1 This misperception may cause us to make treatment decisions for patients with impairments that we might not make for other patients. In this article I describe how to provide better care for patients who have impairments. This includes not presupposing that the patients’ quality of life is decreased, considering with patients how outside factors may be limiting their functioning, and seeking to help offset these factors, if we can, when they exist, to avoid allowing patients’ impairments to result in their being truly “disabled.”
  •  115
    By Author BAGHERI, Alireza. Criticism of “Brain
    with Tom L. Beauchamp, Howard Brody, Franklin G. Miller, Alexander S. Curtis, Martina Darragh, Patricia Milmoe, Ronald M. U. S. Green, Sharona Hoffman, and Jeffrey P. Kahn
    Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 13 (4): 407-09. 2003.
    Philosophy of Neuroscience
  •  69
    Challenging Patients’ Personal, Cultural, and Religious Beliefs
    Journal of Clinical Ethics 13 (4): 259-273. 2002.
    Autonomy
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