Andrew Jameton

Department of Health Promotion, College of Public Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center
University of Minnesota
  • Department of Health Promotion, College of Public Health, University of Nebraska Medical Center
    Retired faculty
  • University of Minnesota
    Center for Bioethics
    Affiliated Faculty (Part-time)
University of Washington
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 1972
Minneapolis-Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Applied Ethics
Normative Ethics
  •  8
    Can Clinical Ethics Survive Climate Change?
    with Jessica Pierce
    Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 64 (4): 511-540. 2021.
    ARRAY
  •  8
    Bill of Rights for Research Subjects
    with Ernest D. Prentice, Paul J. Reitemeier, L. Antonson, and Timothy K. Kelso
    IRB: Ethics & Human Research 15 (2): 7. 1993.
  •  3
    Sustainable Bioethics: Extending Care to an Aging Planet
    Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 19 (4): 314-322. 1999.
    About 1970, Van Rensselaer Potter coined the term bioethics to bring under one heading broad questions of human survival, environment, and biology. In 1971, Potter outlined a statement of principles that linked the ethics of the biological sciences with the ethics of environmental concern. Regrettably, the field that adopted his rubric bioethics immediately diverged from Potter’s interests. Bioethics has become for the most part identified with medical ethics or health care ethics and in so doin…Read more
  •  153
  •  16
    Culture, Healing, and Professional Obligations
    with Joseph Carrese and Kate Brown
    Hastings Center Report 23 (4): 15-17. 2012.
  • History of Medical Ethics: The United States in the Twentieth Century
    with Albert R. Jonsen
    Encyclopedia of Bioethics. forthcoming.
  •  30
    Outline of the Ethical Implications of Earth's Limits for Health Care
    Journal of Medical Humanities 23 (1): 43-59. 2002.
    In addition to good medical services, all aspects of an economy must work together to ensure a high level of public health. However, the abundant economies of the North are contributing heavily to global environmental disaster, with increasing concomitant damage to human health. Environmental health problems result from toxicity (i.e., pollution), scarcity (i.e., poverty), and energy degradation (i.e., entropy). Common to these three factors in environmental demise are the limits of the Earth. P…Read more
  •  138
    The concept of moral distress can be extended from clinical settings to larger environmental concerns affecting health care. Moral distress—a common experience in complex societies—arises when individuals have clear moral judgments about societal practices, but have difficulty in finding a venue in which to express concerns. Since health care is large in scale and climate change is proving to be a major environmental problem, scaling down health care is inevitably a necessary element for mitigat…Read more
  •  36
    Conflicts between Individual Health and Nature Preservation
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 8 (1): 97-98. 1999.
    The article by Jessica Pierce and Christina Kerby, raises some important but seldom asked questions about the use of natural resources in healthcare. They take for their example latex gloves, which are in wide everyday use, especially since the establishment of principles of universal precautions in infection control as a reaction to the spread of HIV. They trace the production of latex gloves back through rubber processing to their origins in Malaysian rubber plantations and elsewhere. They the…Read more
  •  18
    Can Children Be Enrolled in a Placebo-Controlled Randomized Clinical Trial of Synthetic Growth Hormone?
    with Ernest D. Prentice, L. Antonson, Benjamin Graber, and Thomas Sears
    IRB: Ethics & Human Research 11 (1): 6. 1989.
  •  23
    Time Frames for Saving the Planet
    Ethics, Policy and Environment 19 (2): 136-140. 2016.
    Professor Brooks’ paper projects an aura of inevitable catastrophe. He correctly notes that the climate is always changing and that somewhere in the near or far future there will always be somethin...
  •  1
    Climate change ethics
    Lahey Clinic Medical Ethics Journal 17 (2): 1-8. 2010.
  •  14
    Culture, Healing, and Professional Obligations
    with Joseph Carrese and Kate Brown
    Hastings Center Report 23 (4): 15-17. 1993.
  •  30
    The Nurse: When Roles and Rules Conflict
    Hastings Center Report 7 (4): 22-23. 1977.
  •  42
    Global Bioethics
    Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 3 (3): 449. 1994.
    At the September 1992 Birth of Bioethics conference observing the 30th anniversary of the Seattle kidney dialysis program, Warren Reich discussed the “bilocated” birth of the term bioethics. He showed that the term bioethics was coined in Michigan by Van Rensselaer Potter and that the term was also apparently conceived of independently at about the same time in 1970–1971 in Washington, D.C., by Andre Hellegers and Sargent Shriver. Potter's work, like many similar works in the early 1970s, was co…Read more