•  53
    From the Editors
    Bioethics 14 (3). 2000.
  •  125
    Letter to the Editor Regarding the 5th Global Forum on Bioethics in Research
    with Dirceu B. Greco, Bebe Loff, Dafna Feinholz, Dirce Guilhem, Carel C. B. IJsselmuiden, and Juan Carlos Tealdi
    American Journal of Bioethics 4 (4). 2004.
    No abstract
  •  97
    From the editors
    Bioethics 17 (1). 2002.
  •  31
    The politics of ethical consensus finding
    In Ellen Frankel Paul, Fred Dycus Miller & Jeffrey Paul (eds.), Bioethics, Cambridge University Press. pp. 16--2. 2002.
  •  55
    From the Editors
    Bioethics 18 (5). 2004.
  •  22
    Book reviews (review)
    with Sharon Bennett, Peter Davis, and Margo Trappenburg
    Health Care Analysis 6 (2): 166-170. 1998.
  •  44
    From the Editors
    Bioethics 20 (1). 2006.
  •  68
    Anne Donchin
    Bioethics 28 (9). 2014.
  •  53
    From the Editors
    Bioethics 14 (1). 2000.
  •  74
  •  22
    From the editors
    Bioethics 20 (2). 2006.
  •  27
    Editorial
    Bioethics 14 (2). 2000.
  •  101
    From the Editors
    Bioethics 16 (1). 2002.
  •  36
    From the Editors
    Bioethics 16 (2). 2002.
  •  40
    Editorial
    Bioethics 19 (1). 2005.
  •  27
    From the editors
    Bioethics 19 (3). 2005.
  •  82
    Changes to bioethics
    Bioethics 20 (4). 2006.
  •  60
    On the role of religion in articles this journal seeks to publish
    Developing World Bioethics 18 (3): 207-207. 2018.
  •  98
    Lawrence Nelson discusses cases in which abortion is necessary due to a life-threatening medical emergency. He argues that under American law, health care providers who conscientiously refuse to pe...
  •  40
    The ethics of reproductive and therapeutic cloning
    Monash Bioethics Review 19 (2): 33-44. 2000.
    In this article we argue that we have no good ethical reasons to prevent research on both, reproductive and therapeutic cloning. Our strategy is for each type of cloning research to demonstrate that no harms will occur to any person if such research goes ahead. Furthermore, we show that there is substantial interest in the continuation of this research, and the availability of reproductive human cloning technologies. We argue that satisfying these interests, in the absence of any identifiable ha…Read more
  •  37
    This article briefly reviews the discussion over changes to the Declaration of Helsinki. It suggests that the final product the World Medical Association has adopted as its guiding research ethics document is superior to the version it has replaced, but falls short of what would be ethically desirable.
  •  92
    In recent years policy makers and public health professionals have described obesity and its associated diseases as a major global public health problem. Bioethicists have tried to address the normative implications of proposed public health interventions by developing guidelines or proposing ethical principles that ethically grounded health policy responses should take into consideration. We are reviewing here relevant literature and conclude that while there are clearly health implications res…Read more
  •  109
    Hughes offers a consequentialist response to our rejection of accommodation of conscientious objection in medicine. We argue here that his compromise proposition has been tried in many jurisdictions and has failed to deliver unimpeded access to care for eligible patients. The compromise position, entailing an accommodation of conscientious objection provided there is unimpeded access, fails to grasp that the objectors are both determined not to provide services they object to as well as to subve…Read more
  •  98
    Women and Aids: The Ethics of Exaggerated Harm
    with David Mertz†, Mary Ann Sushinsky†, and Udo Schüklenk
    Bioethics 10 (2): 93-113. 1996.
    This article examines the way in which some biomedical ethicists have constructed sexually transmitted AIDS as a significant threat to women's health. We demonstrate that the familiar claim that‘women are the fastest growing group'— whether of HIV‐infected or of AIDS patients — is misleading because it obscures the distinction between proportional rate of growth and absolute increase. Feminist ethicists have suggested that misogyny of a male dominated health care system has led to underreporting…Read more
  •  45
    From the Editors
    with Ruth Chadwick and Udo Schüklenk
    Bioethics 15 (4). 2001.
  •  84
    From the Editors
    with Ruth Chadwick and Udo Schüklenk
    Bioethics 15 (2). 2001.
  •  13
    From the Editors
    with Ruth Chadwick and Udo Schüklenk
    Bioethics 14 (4). 2000.