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73Christian Ethics and the Delivery of Health CareHastings Center Report 29 (5): 42. 1999.Christians have considered the care of the sick to be a form of ministry ever since the time of Jesus. As Christians prepare to commemorate the second millenium of the birth of the founder of their religion, they cannot help but notice that health care is changing more than it ever has in the last 2,000 years. Nor can they help but notice that these changes threaten the notion that health care can be practiced as a genuine ministry in the twenty-first century.
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53Correction to: Whole-brain death and integration: realigning the ontological concept with clinical diagnostic testsTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics 41 (5): 281-282. 2020.My article, “Whole-brain death and integration: Realigning the ontological concept with clinical diagnostic tests”.
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40Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia: Before, During, and After the Holocaust (edited book)Lexington Books. 2020.Unlike Nazi medical experiments, euthanasia during the Third Reich is barely studied or taught. Often, even asking whether euthanasia during the Third Reich is relevant to contemporary debates about physician-assisted suicide (PAS) and euthanasia is dismissed as inflammatory. Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia: Before, During, and After the Holocaust explores the history of euthanasia before and during the Third Reich in depth and demonstrate how Nazi physicians incorporated mainstream We…Read more
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106Should Institutions Disclose the Names of Employees with Covid‐19?Hastings Center Report 50 (3): 25-27. 2020.Prestigious University is a large, private educational institution with a medical school, a university hospital, a law school, and graduate and undergraduate colleges all on a single campus. In the face of the Covid‐19 pandemic, students were told during spring break to return to campus only briefly to retrieve their belongings. Classes then went online. On March 23, 2020, the faculty, students, and staff were emailed the following by the university's director of infection control and public hea…Read more
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70Sedation and care at the end of lifeTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics 39 (3): 171-180. 2018.This special issue of Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics takes up the question of palliative sedation as a source of potential concern or controversy among Christian clinicians and thinkers. Christianity affirms a duty to relieve unnecessary suffering yet also proscribes euthanasia. Accordingly, the question arises as to whether it is ever morally permissible to render dying patients unconscious in order to relieve their suffering. If so, under what conditions? Is this practice genuinely morally…Read more
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146Conscience, tolerance, and pluralism in health careTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics 40 (6): 507-521. 2019.Increasingly, physicians are being asked to provide technical services that many believe are morally wrong or inconsistent with their beliefs about the meaning and purposes of medicine. This controversy has sparked persistent debate over whether practitioners should be permitted to decline participation in a variety of legal practices, most notably physician-assisted suicide and abortion. These debates have become heavily politicized, and some of the key words and phrases are being used without …Read more
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117Whole-brain death and integration: realigning the ontological concept with clinical diagnostic testsTheoretical Medicine and Bioethics 40 (5): 455-481. 2019.For decades, physicians, philosophers, theologians, lawyers, and the public considered brain death a settled issue. However, a series of recent cases in which individuals were declared brain dead yet physiologically maintained for prolonged periods of time has challenged the status quo. This signals a need for deeper reflection and reexamination of the underlying philosophical, scientific, and clinical issues at stake in defining death. In this paper, I consider four levels of philosophical inqu…Read more
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52Engaging Pellegrino’s philosophy of medicine: Can one of the founders of the field still help us today?Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 40 (3): 165-168. 2019.
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93The Phenomenon of Life: Toward a Philosophical BiologyReview of Metaphysics 55 (4): 863-864. 2002.This is the third republication of Jonas’s original, first published in 1966, and previously republished in 1979 and 1982. The prestige of repeated republication generally designates a classic, and this book, while still known by too few, deserves such acclaim. As a general rule, philosophers of science concern themselves either with explaining what scientists do or with prescribing what scientists ought to do. Jonas has a different aim. He examines the fundamental underlying presuppositions of …Read more
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54Why the Common-Sense Distinction between Killing and Allowing-to-Die Is So Easy to Grasp but So Hard to ExplainCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 28 (2): 353-358. 2019.
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58Unlike Diamonds, Defibrillators Aren’t Forever: Why It Is Sometimes Ethical to Deactivate Cardiac Implantable Electrical DevicesCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 28 (2): 338-346. 2019.
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99The ethical obligation of the dead donor ruleMedicine, Health Care and Philosophy 23 (1): 43-50. 2020.The dead donor rule (DDR) originally stated that organ donors must not be killed by and for organ donation. Scholars later added the requirement that vital organs should not be procured before death. Some now argue that the DDR is breached in donation after circulatory determination of death (DCDD) programs. DCDD programs do not breach the original version of the DDR because vital organs are procured only after circulation has ceased permanently as a consequence of withdrawal of life-sustaining …Read more
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100The last low whispers of our dead: when is it ethically justifiable to render a patient unconscious until death?Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 39 (3): 233-263. 2018.A number of practices at the end of life can causally contribute to diminished consciousness in dying patients. Despite overlapping meanings and a confusing plethora of names in the published literature, this article distinguishes three types of clinically and ethically distinct practices: double-effect sedation, parsimonious direct sedation, and sedation to unconsciousness and death. After exploring the concept of suffering, the value of consciousness, the philosophy of therapy, the ethical imp…Read more
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97An Open Letter to Norman Cantor Regarding Dementia and Physician‐Assisted SuicideHastings Center Report 48 (4): 28-30. 2018.Dear Norm,Thank you for sharing such a personal and heartfelt essay. I have been asked by the editors to comment. Reading it inspires me to do so in a similarly heartfelt way. Although I don't know you well, I thought I'd write to you as if you were my patient.I share your sense that Alzheimer disease is a terrible scourge. I've seen much of this disease over a lifetime of practice, and I deeply understand its ravages and the debility and suffering it causes. But what you propose is not a good s…Read more
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101Ethical Principles, Process, and the Work of Bioethics CommissionsHastings Center Report 47 (5987): 50-53. 2017.Shortly after the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues was constituted in 2010 and days before the commission members were to join a conference call to discuss possible topics for their deliberation, Craig Venter held a press conference announcing that his lab had created a synthetic chromosome for a species of mycoplasma and had inserted this genetic material into organisms of another species of mycoplasma (the genes of which had been deactivated), transforming the host sp…Read more
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107Perceptions of control and unrealistic optimism in early-phase cancer trialsJournal of Medical Ethics 44 (2): 121-127. 2018.Purpose Recent research has found unrealistic optimism among patient-subjects in early-phase oncology trials. Our aim was to investigate the cognitive and motivational factors that evoke this bias in this context. We expected perceptions of control to be a strong correlate of unrealistic optimism. Methods A study of patient-subjects enrolled in early-phase oncology trials was conducted at two sites in the USA. Respondents completed questionnaires designed to assess unrealistic optimism and sever…Read more
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118Tolerance, Professional Judgment, and the Discretionary Space of the PhysicianCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 26 (1): 18-31. 2017.Abstract:Arguments against physicians’ claims of a right to refuse to provide tests or treatments to patients based on conscientious objection often depend on two premises that are rarely made explicit. The first is that the protection of religious liberty (broadly construed) should be limited to freedom of worship, assembly, and belief. The second is that because professions are licensed by the state, any citizen who practices a licensed profession is required to provide all the goods and servi…Read more
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62Context and scale: Distinctions for improving debates about physician “rationing”Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 2017 12:1 12 (1): 5. 2017.Important discussions about limiting care based on professional judgment often devolve into heated debates over the place of physicians in bedside rationing. Politics, loaded rhetoric, and ideological caricature from both sides of the rationing debate obscure precise points of disagreement and consensus, and hinder critical dialogue around the obligations and boundaries of professional practice. We propose a way forward by reframing the rationing conversation, distinguishing between the scale of…Read more
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107Context and scale: Distinctions for improving debates about physician “rationing”Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 12 5. 2017.Important discussions about limiting care based on professional judgment often devolve into heated debates over the place of physicians in bedside rationing. Politics, loaded rhetoric, and ideological caricature from both sides of the rationing debate obscure precise points of disagreement and consensus, and hinder critical dialogue around the obligations and boundaries of professional practice. We propose a way forward by reframing the rationing conversation, distinguishing between the scale of…Read more
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71Dear Dr. PeabodyPerspectives in Biology and Medicine 59 (4): 562-566. 2016.Francis W. Peabody, MDDepartment of MedicineBoston City Hospital and Harvard Medical SchoolBoston, MassachusettsMarch 19, 2017Dear Dr. Peabody,Thank you for giving us the opportunity to review your manuscript "The Care of the Patient." It has been carefully considered by the editors and two external reviewers. We regret to inform you that it cannot be considered further for publication in the Prestigious Journal of Medicine.Chief among our reasons is that it is overly long. Opinion pieces—especi…Read more
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288Book Review: T. A. Cavanaugh, Double-Effect Reasoning: Doing Good and Avoiding Evil (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2006). xxiv + 220 pp. £45 (hb), ISBN 978—0—19— 927219—8 (review)Studies in Christian Ethics 21 (3): 438-442. 2008.
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1Killing and Allowing to DieDissertation, Georgetown University. 1995.In this dissertation, I defend the view that the distinction between killing and allowing to die is coherent and morally important. ;I first review the history of the distinction from Hippocrates to the early 20th century. I next show that contemporary accounts of the distinction do not reflect the intuitions of those who employ it. I dismiss accounts based on acts and omissions, causing and allowing, harming and benefitting, double effect, the movements of agents, social expectations, and causa…Read more
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71In Defense of the Amphibians: A Critical Appraisal of Engelhardt on the Recent History of Christian BioethicsChristian Bioethics 20 (2): 187-195. 2014.
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49Confidence and Knowledge of Medical Ethics Among Interns Entering Residency in Different SpecialtiesJournal of Clinical Ethics 16 (3): 230-235. 2005.
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53A Computerized System for Entering Orders to Limit Treatment: Implementation and EvaluationJournal of Clinical Ethics 8 (3): 258-263. 1997.
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88Do the Bishops Have It Right On Health Care Reform?Christian Bioethics 2 (3): 309-325. 1996.The National Conference of Catholic Bishops has argued for significant government involvement in health care in order to assure respect for what they regard as the right to health care. Critics charge that the bishops are wrong because health care is not a right. In this article, it is argued that these critics are correct in their claim that health care is not a right. However, it is also argued that the premise that health care is not a right does not imply that the market is the most equitabl…Read more
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171A randomized trial of ethics education for medical house officersJournal of Medical Ethics 19 (3): 157-163. 1993.We report the results of a randomized trial to assess the impact of an innovative ethics curriculum on the knowledge and confidence of 85 medical house officers in a university hospital programme, as well as their responses to a simulated clinical case. Twenty-five per cent of the house officers received a lecture series, 25 per cent received lectures and case conferences, with an ethicist in attendance, and 50 per cent served as controls. A post-intervention questionnaire was administered. Know…Read more
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160Are withholding and withdrawing therapy always morally equivalent?Journal of Medical Ethics 20 (4): 218-224. 1994.Many medical ethicists accept the thesis that there is no moral difference between withholding and withdrawing life-sustaining therapy. In this paper, we offer an interesting counterexample which shows that this thesis is not always true. Withholding is distinguished from withdrawing by the simple fact that therapy must have already been initiated in order to speak coherently about withdrawal. Provided that there is a genuine need and that therapy is biomedically effective, the historical fact t…Read more
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266Ethics education for medical house officers: long-term improvements in knowledge and confidenceJournal of Medical Ethics 23 (2): 88-92. 1997.OBJECTIVE: To examine the long-term effects of an innovative curriculum on medical house officers' (HOs') knowledge, confidence, and attitudes regarding medical ethics. DESIGN: Long term cohort study. The two-year curriculum, implemented by a single physician ethicist with assistance from other faculty, was fully integrated into the programme. It consisted of monthly sessions: ethics morning report alternating with didactic conferences. The content included topics such as ethics vocabulary and p…Read more
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105Researchers' preferences and attitudes on ethical aspects of genomics research: a comparative study between the USA and SpainJournal of Medical Ethics 35 (4): 251-257. 2009.Introduction: The use of human samples in genomic research has increased ethical debate about informed consent (IC) requirements and the information that subjects should receive regarding the results of the research. However, there are no quantitative data regarding researchers’ attitudes about these issues. Methods: We present the results of a survey of 104 US and 100 Spanish researchers who had published genomic epidemiology studies in 61 journals during 2006. Results: Researchers preferred a …Read more
Chicago, Illinois, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Normative Ethics |