•  7
    Coming to America: Bioethical Training at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics and the Establishment of Medical Ethics in Germany
    with Mathias Schütz
    Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 35 (2): 205-232. 2025.
    Between 1987 and 1995, the Kennedy Institute of Ethics held a number of training courses specifically addressing German physicians and scholars engaged in the establishment of medical ethics in West Germany. These courses were linked to the annual Intensive Bioethics Course the institute had been organizing since 1975. During the 1980s, the perspective of bioethical training began to shift toward an international audience. Through the fundraising skills and organizational efforts of Hans-Martin …Read more
  •  35
    GTE 2002–2020. Institutionalization without integration?
    with Mathias Schütz
    Ethik in der Medizin 37 (4): 497-514. 2025.
    Definition of the problem The article presents a historical analysis and interpretation of the construct “History, Theory and Ethics of Medicine” (abbreviated as GTE in German) in German medical education. This construct, which was included in the new licensing regulations for physicians in 2002 and which led to an almost comprehensive institutionalization of GTE at German medical schools, has now disappeared from the drafts of new licensing regulations. Arguments This development provokes the q…Read more
  •  46
    Interactions between the host and its associated microbiota differ spatially and the local cross talk determines organ function and physiology. Animals and their organs are not uniform but contain several functional and cellular compartments and gradients. In the intestinal tract, different parts of the gut carry out different functions, tissue structure varies accordingly, epithelial cells are differentially distributed and gradients exist for several physicochemical parameters such as nutrient…Read more
  •  97
    Advancing Our Functional Understanding of Host–Microbiota Interactions: A Need for New Types of Studies
    with Jinru He, Janina Lange, Georgios Marinos, Jay Bathia, Danielle Harris, Ryszard Soluch, Vaibhvi Vaibhvi, Peter Deines, M. Amine Hassani, Kim-Sara Wagner, Roman Zapien-Campos, and Cornelia Jaspers
    Bioessays 42 (2): 1900211. 2020.