•  24
    Beyond Definitional Clarity: Historical Insights on Suffering, Relief, and MAID
    American Journal of Bioethics 25 (8): 25-27. 2025.
    In their insightful article “Is Suffering a Useless Concept?,” Nelson et al. (2025) raise important concerns about the utility of the term “suffering” in clinical contexts. They begin by organizing...
  •  64
    Moral Distress as Critique: Going beyond ‘Illegitimate Institutional Constraints’
    with Kate Jackson-Meyer and Xavier Symons
    American Journal of Bioethics 23 (4): 79-82. 2023.
    Kolbe and de Melo-Martin (2023) raise important concerns about the limited usefulness of measures of moral distress. They propose that moral distress is best measured in terms of “illegitimate inst...
  •  53
    This paper has two aims. The first is to defend a recent critique of the leading medical theory of suffering, which alleges too narrow a focus on violent experiences of suffering. Although sympathetic to this critique, I claim that it lacks a counterexample of the kinds of experiences the leading theory is said to neglect. Drawing on recent clinical cases and the longer intellectual history of suffering, my paper provides this missing counterexample. I then answer some possible objections to my …Read more
  •  110
    Pain versus suffering: a distinction currently without a difference
    Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (3): 175-178. 2021.
    My paper challenges an influential distinction between pain and suffering put forward by physician-ethicist, Eric Cassell. I argue that Cassell’s distinction is philosophically untenable because he contrasts suffering with an outdated theory of pain. In particular, Cassell focuses on one type of pain, the interpretation of nociception induced by noxious stimuli such as heat or sharp objects; yet since the late 1970s, pain scientists have rendered both nociception and noxious stimuli unnecessary …Read more
  •  69
    Pain versus suffering: a distinction currently without a difference
    Journal of Medical Ethics 9999 (9999). 2019.
    My paper challenges an influential distinction between pain and suffering put forward by physician-ethicist, Eric Cassell. I argue that Cassell’s distinction is philosophically untenable because he contrasts suffering with an outdated theory of pain. In particular, Cassell focuses on one type of pain, the interpretation of nociception induced by noxious stimuli such as heat or sharp objects; yet since the late 1970s, pain scientists have rendered both nociception and noxious stimuli unnecessary …Read more
  •  80
    Eric Cassell famously defined suffering as a person’s severe distress at a threat to their personal integrity. This article draws attention to some problems with the concept of distress in this theory. In particular, I argue that Cassell’s theory turns on distress but does not define it, which, in light of the complexity of distress, problematizes suffering in three ways: first, suffering becomes too equivocal to apply in at least some cases that Cassell nevertheless identifies as suffering; sec…Read more