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82Heterozygote Carrier Testing in High Schools Abroad: What are the Lessons for the U.S.?Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (4): 753-764. 2006.To promote informed reproductive decisions, prenatal carrier testing is offered to women and couples to provide information about the risk of having a child with one or more genetic conditions. Tay Sachs Disease was one of the first conditions for which prenatal carrier testing was developed. Today, many additional conditions can be tested for, depending on prospective parental interest, family history, or ethnicity. Interestingly, most individuals and couples do not request prenatal carrier inf…Read more
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96Consent Is the Cornerstone of Ethically Valid Research: Ethical Issues in Recontacting Subjects Who Enrolled in Research as a MinorAmerican Journal of Bioethics 15 (10): 61-63. 2015.
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58The Moral and Legal Need to Disclose Despite a Certificate of ConfidentialityAmerican Journal of Bioethics 14 (10): 51-53. 2014.No abstract
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43[Book review] children, families, and health care decision making (review)Ethics 112 (3): 639-641. 2002.
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70Prenatal Testing and Disability Rights (review)Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 45 (4): 624-626. 2002.
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17Prenatal testing and newborn screeningIn Peter A. Singer & A. M. Viens (eds.), The Cambridge textbook of bioethics, Cambridge University Press. 2008.
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52Patient Autonomy: Imperfect, Insufficient, but Still Quite NecessaryJournal of Clinical Ethics 13 (1): 57-62. 2002.
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67A Compounding of Errors: The Case of Bone Marrow Donation between Non-Intimate SiblingsJournal of Clinical Ethics 17 (3): 220-226. 2006.
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72A Descriptive and Moral Evaluation of Providing Informal Medical Care to One’s Own ChildrenJournal of Clinical Ethics 20 (4): 353-361. 2009.
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146Do Genetic Relationships Create Moral Obligations in Organ Transplantation?Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 11 (2): 153-159. 2002.In 1999, a case was described on national television in which a woman had enlisted onto an international bone marrow registry with the altruistic desire to offer her bone marrow to some unidentified individual in need of a transplant. The potential donor then was notified that she was a compatible match with someone dying from leukemia and gladly donated her marrow, which cured the recipient of the disease. Years later, though, the recipient developed end-stage renal disease, a consequence of th…Read more
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158Response to “Intrafamilial Organ Donation Is Often an Altruistic Act” by Aaron Spital and “Donor Benefit Is the Key to Justified Living Organ Donation,” by Aaron Spital : Motivation, Risk, and Benefit in Living Organ Donation: A Reply to Aaron Spital (review)Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 14 (2): 191-194. 2005.In a recent article in this journal, we argued that living organ donation from a parent to a child should be described as a beneficent rather than an altruistic act. Emotional relationships can generate an obligation of beneficence to help those with whom we have these relationships. This may involve an obligation for a parent to donate an organ to a child, even though it entails some risk to the parent. The parent's donation is not altruistic because altruistic acts are not obligatory but optio…Read more
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73A Non-Paternalistic Conception of Relational Autonomy Still Needs OthersPhilosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 20 (2): 187-189. 2013.
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85Lethal Language, Lethal DecisionsHastings Center Report 33 (2): 37-41. 2003.Although many of the congenital syndromes that used to be lethal no longer are, they are still routinely referred to as “lethal anomalies.” But the label is not only inaccurate, it is also dangerous: by portraying as a medical determination what is in fact a judgment about the child's quality of life, it wrests from the parents a decision that only the parents can make.
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90Health Care Decisionmaking by Children Is It in Their Best Interest?Hastings Center Report 27 (6): 41-46. 1997.The argument for children's rights in health care has been long in the making. The success of this position is reflected in the 1995 American Academy of Pediatrics recommendations for the role of children in health care decisionmaking, which suggest that children be given greater voice as they mature. But there are good moral and practical reasons for exercising caution in these health care situations, especially when the child and parents disagree. Parents need the moral and legal space within …Read more
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159Relational Autonomy as the Key to Effective Behavioral ChangePhilosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 20 (2): 169-177. 2013.The Common Health problems that plague Americans today are often the result of people’s choices and behaviors: obesity, cigarette smoking, accidental pediatric head trauma owing to failure to properly restrain children, and failure to adhere to medication regimens. For each problem, there is a well-studied effective behavioral intervention: a healthy diet and exercise for obesity, smoking cessation programs to overcome cigarette addiction, appropriate car restraints to prevent accidental head tr…Read more
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109The Challenges of Incorporating Research Ethics Consultation Into Institutional Human Subjects Protections ProgramsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 18 (1): 49-51. 2018.
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229Newborn Screening for Krabbe Disease: What Illinois Can Learn from New YorkPublic Health Ethics 6 (1): 119-123. 2013.
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177Children in Medical Research: Access versus ProtectionOxford University Press. 2006.Lainie Ross presents a rigorous critical investigation of the development of policy governing the involvement of children in medical research. She examines the shift in focus from protection of medical research subjects, enshrined in post-World War II legislation, to the current era in which access is assuming greater precedence. Infamous studies such as Willowbrook (where mentally retarded children were infected with hepatitis) are evidence that before the policy shift protection was not always…Read more
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629Mandatory versus voluntary consent for newborn screening?Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 20 (4): 299-328. 2010.Virtually every infant in the United States (U.S.) undergoes a heel stick within the first week of life to test for a variety of metabolic, endocrine, and hematological conditions as part of state-run universal newborn screening (NBS) programs. In the U.S., NBS began in the 1960s for phenylketonuria (PKU), a metabolic condition that causes intellectual disability if left untreated. I review the history of how NBS came to be a mandatory public health program that did not require parental consent1…Read more
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87What Is Wrong with the Physician Charter on ProfessionalismHastings Center Report 36 (4): 17-19. 2006.
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68In Defense of the Hopkins Lead Abatement StudiesJournal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 30 (1): 50-57. 2002.In August 2001, the Maryland Court of Appeals harshly criticized the Kennedy Krieger Institute of Johns Hopkins University for knowingly exposing poor children to lead-based paint. The court’s decision made national news, and is worth examining because it raises several very important issues for research ethics.The research conducted by the Institute was an attempt to understand how successful different lead abatement programs were in reducing continued lead exposure to children. Previously, Jul…Read more
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131Informed Consent in Pediatric ResearchCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 13 (4): 346-358. 2004.The first principle of the Nuremberg Code requires the informed consent of the subject. Proxy consent was not addressed until the Declaration of Helsinki. U.S. policies regarding consent for the participation of children in research would not be finalized for almost two more decades in subpart D of the federal regulations that govern the participation of subjects in research. In October 2000, the Children's Health Act was passed. Title X required the Secretary of the Department of Health and Hum…Read more
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155Against the Tide: Arguments against Respecting a Minor's Refusal of Efficacious Life-Saving TreatmentCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 18 (3): 302. 2009.
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109Arguments against Respecting a Minor's Refusal of Efficacious Life-Saving Treatment Redux, Part IICambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 18 (4): 432. 2009.This CQ department is dedicated to bringing noted bioethicsts together in order to debate some of the most perplexing contemporary bioethics issues. You are encouraged to contact department editor, D. Micah Hester, UAMS/Humanities, 4301 W. Markham St. #646, Little Rock, AR 72205, with any suggestions for debate topics and interlocutors you would like to see published herein
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131Forty Years Later: The Scope of Bioethics RevisitedPerspectives in Biology and Medicine 53 (3): 452-457. 2010.Van Rensselaer Potter was an American biochemist who worked in the McArdle Laboratory for Cancer Research at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. In 1970, in an article in this journal, Potter coined the term bioethics to combine a new discipline that combines biological knowledge with ethics. Potter wrote, “Ethical values cannot be separated from biological facts” (p. 127). His conception was broad-ranging: “We are in great need of a land ethic, a wild-life ethic, a population ethic, a consu…Read more
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University of RochesterHealth Humanities and Bioethics
Department of PhilosophyDistinguished Professor
Rochester, New York, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Biomedical Ethics |
| Genetic Ethics |
| Medical Ethics |
| Biomedical Ethics, Miscellaneous |
| Applied Ethics |