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60Este libro es un homenaje a la trayectoria intelectual y académica de la profesora María Teresa López de la Vieja, Catedrática emérita de la Universidad de Salamanca. En él se trazan algunos de los caminos que, con su obra, nos invita a transitar. El volumen recoge contribuciones de colegas de varias nacionalidades y procedentes de diversos ámbitos de reflexión que le son afines: la filosofía moral y política, la literatura, la teoría de la argumentación, los estudios feministas, las éticas apli…Read more
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109A Slippery Argument: Ableism in the Debate on Medical Assistance in DyingAmerican Journal of Bioethics 23 (11): 99-102. 2023.In this commentary, we criticize the argument that allowing euthanasia for people with disabilities is ableist. We analyze the distinction between facts and values in medical assistance in dying, the expressivist objection, and the problem of crypwashing.
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143Death pluralism: a proposalPhilosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 18 (1): 1-12. 2023.The debate over the determination of death has been raging for more than fifty years. Since then, objections against the diagnosis of brain death from family members of those diagnosed as dead-have been increasing and are causing some countries to take novel steps to accommodate people’s beliefs and preferences in the determination of death. This, coupled with criticism by some academics of the brain death criterion, raises some questions about the issues surrounding the determination of death. …Read more
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135How do people use ‘killing’, ‘letting die’ and related bioethical concepts? Contrasting descriptive and normative hypothesesBioethics 34 (5): 509-518. 2020.Bioethicists involved in end‐of‐life debates routinely distinguish between ‘killing’ and ‘letting die’. Meanwhile, previous work in cognitive science has revealed that when people characterize behaviour as either actively ‘doing’ or passively ‘allowing’, they do so not purely on descriptive grounds, but also as a function of the behaviour’s perceived morality. In the present report, we extend this line of research by examining how medical students and professionals (N = 184) and laypeople (N = 1…Read more
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71Defining Consent: Autonomy and the Role of the FamilyIn Solveig Lena Hansen & Silke Schicktanz (eds.), Ethical Challenges of Organ Transplantation, Transcript Verlag. pp. 43-64. 2021.The ethics of deceased organ procurement (OP) is supposedly based on individual consent to donate, either explicit (opt-in) or presumed (opt-out). However, in many cases, individuals fail to express any preference regarding donation after death. When this happens, the decision to remove or not to remove their organs depends on the policy’s default option or on family preferences. Several studies show that in most countries the family plays a significant and often decisive role in the process of …Read more
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127Avoiding Violation of the Dead Donor Rule: The Costs to PatientsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 12 (6): 15-17. 2012.The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 12, Issue 6, Page 15-17, June 2012
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76Fuga de cerebros y biografías low cost: nueva etapa en la precarización de la juventudRecerca.Revista de Pensament I Anàlisi 16 13-33. 2015.La normalización de la precariedad entre las personas jóvenes está entrando en lo que parece una nueva fase. De la mano de, entre otros factores, los discursos empresariales y la teoría del capital humano, estamos asistiendo a una vuelta de tuerca en la presión sobre la juventud: ya no basta con la búsqueda «activa» de empleo, ahora hay que invertir en uno mismo como «empresario de sí mismo» y, en esta lógica, si es preciso hay que optar por la «movilidad internacional». Presentamos una revisión…Read more
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109Examining Public Trust in Categorical versus Comprehensive Triage CriteriaAmerican Journal of Bioethics 20 (7): 106-109. 2020.Volume 20, Issue 7, July 2020, Page 106-109.
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82The Dead Donor Rule as Policy IndoctrinationHastings Center Report 48 (11): 39-42. 2018.Since the 1960s, organ procurement policies have relied on the boundary of death—advertised as though it were a factual, value‐free, and unobjectionable event—to foster organ donation while minimizing controversy. Death determination, however, involves both discoveries of facts and events and decisions about their meaning (whether the facts and events are relevant to establish a vital status), the latter being subjected to legitimate disagreements requiring deliberation. By revisiting the histor…Read more
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1518The Death Debates: A Call for Public DeliberationHastings Center Report 43 (5): 34-35. 2013.In this issue of the Report, James L. Bernat proposes an innovative and sophisticated distinction to justify the introduction of permanent cessation as a valid substitute standard for irreversible cessation in death determination. He differentiates two approaches to conceptualizing and determining death: the biological concept and the prevailing medical practice standard. While irreversibility is required by the biological concept, the weaker criterion of permanence, he claims, has always suffic…Read more
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126Response to Open Peer Commentaries on “Donation After Circulatory Death: Burying the Dead Donor Rule”American Journal of Bioethics 11 (8). 2011.The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 11, Issue 8, Page W4-W6, August 2011
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178One or two types of death? Attitudes of health professionals towards brain death and donation after circulatory death in three countriesMedicine, Health Care and Philosophy 16 (3): 457-467. 2013.This study examined health professionals’ (HPs) experience, beliefs and attitudes towards brain death (BD) and two types of donation after circulatory death (DCD)—controlled and uncontrolled DCD. Five hundred and eighty-seven HPs likely to be involved in the process of organ procurement were interviewed in 14 hospitals with transplant programs in France, Spain and the US. Three potential donation scenarios—BD, uncontrolled DCD and controlled DCD—were presented to study subjects during individual…Read more
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77Ni vivo ni muerto, sino todo lo contrario. Reflexiones sobre la muerte cerebralArbor 189 (763). 2013.Determinar el momento exacto en que tiene lugar la muerte siempre ha sido un problema de difícil resolución. Las propuestas tradicionales y contemporáneas para justificar los criterios legales de determinación de la muerte se han visto condicionadas por intereses sociales —en particular, recientemente, relativos a los trasplantes de órganos—. Los criterios legalmente aceptados para declarar la muerte siguen careciendo de soporte conceptual o científico. En este contexto de ausencia de consenso s…Read more
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151“Nudging” Deceased Donation Through an Opt-Out System: A Libertarian Approach or Manipulation?American Journal of Bioethics 16 (11): 25-28. 2016.Nudges involve designing social “choice contexts” to promote what “experts” regard as beneficial for individuals and the society, by making the “right” choices easier. The most common form of nudge...
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112How Can You Be Transparent About Labeling the Living as Dead?American Journal of Bioethics 17 (5): 24-25. 2017.
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85Ethical Issues in Pediatric Organ Transplantation (edited book)Springer Verlag. 2016.This book offers a theoretical and practical overview of the specific ethical and legal issues in pediatric organ transplantation. Written by a team of leading experts, Ethical Issues in Pediatric Organ Transplantation addresses those difficult ethical questions concerning clinical, organizational, legal and policy issues including donor, recipient and allocation issues. Challenging topics, including children as donors, donation after cardiac death, misattributed paternity, familial conflicts of…Read more
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186Donation After Circulatory Death: Burying the Dead Donor RuleAmerican Journal of Bioethics 11 (8): 36-43. 2011.Despite continuing controversies regarding the vital status of both brain-dead donors and individuals who undergo donation after circulatory death (DCD), respecting the dead donor rule (DDR) remains the standard moral framework for organ procurement. The DDR increases organ supply without jeopardizing trust in transplantation systems, reassuring society that donors will not experience harm during organ procurement. While the assumption that individuals cannot be harmed once they are dead is reas…Read more
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62Dying and multiplying lifeHastings Center Report 44 (5). 2014.It was only after James P. Lovette's death, in 2006, that I discovered that the twenty‐four‐year‐old colleague and friend with whom I had spent so many afternoons debating issues in organ transplantation had been the first successful child heart transplantee in the world and one of the longest‐living survivors of a second transplant. During the years we met, he never even hinted at the fact that three different hearts had beaten in his chest. The revelation that his life had been an almost unint…Read more
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123Casting Light and Doubt on Uncontrolled DCDD ProtocolsHastings Center Report 43 (1): 27-30. 2013.The ever‐increasing demand for organs led Spain, France, and other European countries to promote uncontrolled donation after circulatory determination of death (uDCDD). For the same reason, New York City has recently developed its own uDCDD protocol, which differs from European programs in some key ways. The New York protocol incorporates a series of technical and management improvements that address some practical problems identified in response to European uDCDD protocols. However, the more fu…Read more
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168A Review of: “Timothy F. Murphy. 2004. Case Studies in Biomedical Research Ethics”: Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press. 368 pp. $29.00, paperback (review)American Journal of Bioethics 5 (2): 64-66. 2005.Cases are, in many ways, the lifeblood of bioethics (Crigger 1998, 15). Moral theory must be checked against the practical experience case studies provide, which experience may engender reasons to...
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61Precariedad en la era del trabajo digitalRecerca.Revista de Pensament I Anàlisi 24 (1): 1-13. 2019.Texto introductorio y de presentación del número monográfico.
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63Las "cárceles del capital humano": trabajo y vidas precarias en la juventud universitariaRecerca.Revista de Pensament I Anàlisi 20 59-78. 2017.En los últimos treinta años se ha transitado desde una concepción del capital humano como una macromagnitud económica a una idea de capital humano corporeizada en el individuo. Hemos asistido a una progresiva infiltración de dicha ideología del capital humano también en la vida de la juventud precaria. Nos centramos aquí en los jóvenes universitarios, para quienes el capital humano, ya de forma hegemónica, dirige y marca sus recorridos laborales y vitales. El análisis de los discursos de estos j…Read more
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41El uso del dispositivo en el estudio de los discursos gerencialesQuaderns de Filosofia 8 (2): 91. 2021.Resumen: En el marco del estudio de los discursos gerenciales, se destacan en el presente texto algunas de las aportaciones de Medina-Vicent, especialmente el análisis de los procesos de individualización y despolitización de mensajes que entroncarían con las reivindicaciones del feminismo. En este contexto, se propone la incorporación del concepto foucaultiano de dispositivo para el estudio de los elementos que contribuyen a la difusión de los discursos gerenciales. Este concepto podría ser de …Read more
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158Development of a Knockout Competition in Basketball: A Study of the Spanish Copa del ReyFrontiers in Psychology 10. 2019.