-
18A Defense of Institutional Conscience Rights for Secular Hospitals: Philosophical Justifications and Practical ApplicationsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 1-14. forthcoming.We have previously argued that clinicians should leverage conscience, rather than quasi-objective clinical standards, to justify their refusal to provide aggressive interventions to patients who were likely permanently unconscious. Such a move sidesteps perennial disagreements over concepts such as “futility,” “harm,” and “best interest”; and it is consistent with the growing acknowledgement of value pluralism in healthcare. In this paper, we make similar arguments about the conscience rights of…Read more
-
23Conscientious Objection to Aggressive Interventions for Patients in a Vegetative StateAmerican Journal of Bioethics 25 (3): 10-21. 2025.Some physicians refuse to perform life-sustaining interventions, such as tracheostomy, on patients who are very likely to remain permanently unconscious. To explain their refusal, these clinicians often invoke the language of “futility”, but this can be inaccurate and can mask problematic forms of clinical power. This paper explores whether such refusals should instead be framed as conscientious objections. We contend that the refusal to provide interventions for patients very likely to remain p…Read more
-
17Food Sovereignty and AgribusinessIn David M. Kaplan (ed.), Encyclopedia of Food and Agricultural Ethics, Springer Verlag. pp. 1277-1281. 2019.
-
47Differential impacts of vaccine mandates: subjective experiences and policy implicationsMonash Bioethics Review 43 (2): 372-383. 2025.Vaccine mandates are diverse policy instruments that impact people differently. This paper explores how different types of mandates may generate distinct subjective experiences of constraint, compulsion, or power across populations. We identify and analyze five key aspects of mandate policies that influence these experiences – (1) the alignment between individual preferences and mandate requirements, (2) the relationship between parents’ and children’s interests, (3) the experienced severity of …Read more
-
100The Proper Uses and Constraints on Exercises of Conscience in Cases of Profound Neurological Injury: A Dialogue with Our ColleaguesAmerican Journal of Bioethics 25 (4): 1-5. 2025.We are grateful for the engagement of our colleagues with our thesis: conscientious objection to aggressive interventions for likely permanently unconscious patients is ethically permissible. In li...
-
54Pediatric Assent in Clinical Practice: A Critical Scoping ReviewAJOB Empirical Bioethics 15 (4): 336-346. 2024.Background This study assesses how pediatric assent is conceptualized and justified within the therapeutic context. Pediatric ethicists generally agree that children should participate in medical care decisions in developmentally appropriate ways. Much attention has been paid to pediatric assent for research participation, but ambiguities persist in how assent is conceptualized and operationalized in the therapeutic context where countervailing considerations such as the child’s best interest an…Read more
-
61Prudence, Preferences, and Power: The (Ir)Relevance of Decision-Making Capacity in Medical Decision MakingAmerican Journal of Bioethics 24 (8): 93-95. 2024.Volume 24, Issue 8, August 2024, Page 93-95.
-
51Principled Conscientious Provision: Referral Symmetry and Its Implications for Protecting Secular ConscienceHastings Center Report 54 (4): 3-10. 2024.Abstract“Conscientious provision” refers to situations in which clinicians wish to provide legal and professionally accepted treatments prohibited within their (usually Catholic) health care institutions. It mirrors “conscientious objection,” which refers to situations in which clinicians refuse to provide legal and professionally accepted treatments offered within their (usually secular) health care institutions. Conscientious provision is not protected by law, but conscientious objection is. I…Read more
-
66Limits on Parental Discretion in Medical Decision-Making: pediatric intervention principles convergePerspectives in Biology and Medicine 67 (2): 277-289. 2024.Pediatric intervention principles help clinicians and health-care institutions determine appropriate responses when parents’ medical decisions place children at risk. Several intervention principles have been proposed and defended in the pediatric ethics literature. These principles may appear to provide conflicting guidance, but much of that conflict is superficial. First, seemingly different pediatric intervention principles sometimes converge on the same guidance. Second, these principles oft…Read more
-
93Conscientious Objection to Aggressive Interventions for Patients in a Vegetative StateAmerican Journal of Bioethics 1-12. 2023.Some physicians refuse to perform life-sustaining interventions, such as tracheostomy, on patients who are very likely to remain permanently unconscious. To explain their refusal, these clinicians often invoke the language of “futility”, but this can be inaccurate and can mask problematic forms of clinical power. This paper explores whether such refusals should instead be framed as conscientious objections. We contend that the refusal to provide interventions for patients very likely to remain p…Read more
-
113Making salient ethics arguments about vaccine mandates: A California case studyBioethics 37 (9): 854-861. 2023.Vaccine mandates can take many forms, and different kinds of mandates can implicate an array of values in diverse ways. It follows that good ethics arguments about particular vaccine mandates will attend to the details of individual policies. Furthermore, attention to particular mandate policies—and to attributes of the communities they aim to govern—can also illuminate which ethics arguments may be more salient in particular contexts. If ethicists want their arguments to make a difference in po…Read more
-
43Correction to: It’s Worth What You Can Sell It for: A Survey of Employment and Compensation Models for Clinical EthicistsHEC Forum 36 (3): 421-422. 2024.
-
54It’s Worth What You Can Sell It for: A Survey of Employment and Compensation Models for Clinical EthicistsHEC Forum 36 (3): 405-420. 2024.This article reports results of a survey about employment and compensation models for clinical ethics consultants working in the United States and discusses the relevance of these results for the professionalization of clinical ethics. This project uses self-reported data from healthcare ethics consultants to estimate compensation across different employment models. The average full-time annualized salary of respondents with a clinical doctorate is $188,310.08 (SD=$88,556.67), $146,134.85 (SD=$5…Read more
-
46Healthcare Ethics Consultation as Public PhilosophyIn Lee McIntyre, Nancy McHugh & Ian Olasov (eds.), A companion to public philosophy, Wiley-blackwell. 2022.Healthcare ethics consultation is therefore one of the most consequential, institutionally accepted, and widespread forms of public philosophy in the United States. In this chapter, the authors begin with an overview of the development of healthcare ethics and its emergence as a concrete practice embedded in healthcare settings. They then describe the core ethical principles that inform the everyday practice of ethics consultations and the generally accepted steps involved in conducting a consul…Read more
-
89Reciprocity, Vulnerability, and the Moral Significance of Herd ImmunityJournal of Applied Philosophy 40 (4): 725-745. 2023.This article proposes a novel defense of vaccine mandates: such policies are justifiable because they protect the capabilities of individuals who cannot cultivate individual immunity against infection. We begin by considering a nearby argument that has recently enjoyed popularity, which claims individuals have an enforceable obligation to get vaccinated because they have benefited from community protection (often referred to as ‘herd immunity’), and thus they ought to do their fair share in sust…Read more
-
70Capacities to Refuse Treatment: A ReplyAmerican Journal of Bioethics 24 (3): 15-19. 2023.The three of us work as academics and clinical ethicists. In our clinical ethics work, we often encounter patients who lack decision-making capacity, but who nonetheless have strong preferences abo...
-
49Vaccine Rhetorics, by Heidi Yoston Lawrence. Columbus, OH: The Ohio State University Press, 2020Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (3): 425-427. 2023.
-
45Ethics of age de-escalation in pediatric vaccine trialsVaccine. forthcoming.In the development of new vaccines, many trials use age de-escalation: after establishing safety and efficacy in adult populations, progressively younger cohorts are enrolled and studied. Age de-escalation promotes many values. The responsibility to protect children from potential risks of experimental vaccines is significant, not only given increased risks of adverse effects but also because parents and medical professionals have a moral responsibility to protect children from harms associated …Read more
-
39How policymakers employ ethical frames to design and introduce new policies: the case of childhood vaccine mandates in AustraliaPolicy and Politics 50 (4): 526-547. 2022.Australian states exclude unvaccinated children from early education and care via ‘No Jab No Play’ policies, but some offer exemptions for the socially disadvantaged. Such mandatory vaccination policies provoke heated arguments about morality and potential downstream impacts, and the politics of which kinds of people get exempted from mandates are often fraught. Synthesising existing frameworks for considering the role of moral principles and rational-technical justifications in policymaking, we…Read more
-
44School staff as vaccine advocates: Perspectives on vaccine mandates and the student registration processVaccine 41 (5): 1169-1175. 2023.Recently, several states in the US have made it more difficult to receive nonmedical exemptions to school vaccine mandates in the hope of better orienting parents towards vaccination. However, little is known about how public-facing school staff implement and enforce mandate policies, including why or how often they steer parents towards nonmedical exemptions. This study focused on Michigan, which has recently added an additional burden for families seeking nonmedical exemptions. We used an anon…Read more
-
80Vaccine Refusal Is Not Free RidingErasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 14 (1). 2021.Vaccine refusal is not a free rider problem. The claim that vaccine refusers are free riders is inconsistent with the beliefs and motivations of most vaccine refusers. This claim also inaccurately depicts the relationship between an individual’s immunization choice, their ability to enjoy the benefits of community protection, and the costs and benefits that individuals experience from immunization and community protection. Modeling vaccine refusers as free riders also likely distorts the ethical…Read more
-
73Vaccine Refusal Is Still Not Free RidingErasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 14 (2). 2022.In a recent article, "Can One Both Contribute to and Benefit from Herd Immunity?", Lucie White argues that vaccine refusal is more like free riding than we have claimed that it is. Here, we critically reply to White’s arguments.
-
84Three Kinds of Decision-Making Capacity for Refusing Medical InterventionsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 22 (11): 73-83. 2021.According to a standard account of patient decision-making capacity, patients can provide ethically valid consent or refusal only if they are able to understand and appreciate their medical c...
-
95Core Concepts and Contemporary Issues in Privacy (edited book)Springer Verlag. 2018.Privacy is widely valued, especially in individualistic cultures, because people want to control access to their bodies and to information about their personal choices. Privacy can promote a variety of goods. It can protect intimacy among friends and colleagues and create trusting relations of tolerance among strangers. Privacy can promote dignity, since it can be embarrassing to disclose secret or unconsidered thoughts or opinions, or to reveal one’s naked body or other private spaces. Privacy …Read more
-
110The capacity to designate a surrogate is distinct from decisional capacity: normative and empirical considerationsJournal of Medical Ethics 48 (3): 189-192. 2021.The capacity to designate a surrogate (CDS) is not simply another kind of medical decision-making capacity (DMC). A patient with DMC can express a preference, understand information relevant to that choice, appreciate the significance of that information for their clinical condition, and reason about their choice in light of their goals and values. In contrast, a patient can possess the CDS even if they cannot appreciate their condition or reason about the relative risks and benefits of their op…Read more
-
857Reasons to Accept Vaccine Refusers in Primary CarePediatrics 146 (6). 2020.Vaccine refusal forces us to confront tensions between many values, including scientific expertise, parental rights, children’s best interests, social responsibility, public trust, and community health. Recent outbreaks of vaccine-preventable and emerging infectious diseases have amplified these issues. The prospect of a coronavirus disease 2019 vaccine signals even more friction on the horizon. In this contentious sociopolitical landscape, it is therefore more important than ever for clinicians…Read more
-
84Harming Children to Benefit Others: A ReplyAmerican Journal of Bioethics 20 (12). 2020.We are pleased to have received such a varied set of commentaries on our target article, “Pox Parties for Grannies? Chickenpox, Exogenous Boosting, and Harmful Injustices,” and we are thankful for the opportunity to respond to some of them here. We regret that space limitations preclude us from responding to each. In what follows we will begin by addressing commentaries that expand the application of our arguments. We will then correct some seeming misunderstandings about our distinctions, argum…Read more
-
82Practising what we preach: clinical ethicists’ professional perspectives and personal use of advance directivesJournal of Medical Ethics 48 (2): 144-149. 2022.The field of clinical bioethics strongly advocates for the use of advance directives to promote patient autonomy, particularly at the end of life. This paper reports a study of clinical bioethicists’ perceptions of the professional consensus about advance directives, as well as their personal advance care planning practices. We find that clinical bioethicists are often sceptical about the value of advance directives, and their personal choices about advance directives often deviate from what cli…Read more
-
95Pox Parties for Grannies? Chickenpox, Exogenous Boosting, and Harmful InjusticesAmerican Journal of Bioethics 20 (9): 45-57. 2020.Some societies tolerate or encourage high levels of chickenpox infection among children to reduce rates of shingles among older adults. This tradeoff is unethical. The varicella zoster virus (VZV) causes both chickenpox and shingles. After people recover from chickenpox, VZV remains in their nerve cells. If their immune systems become unable to suppress the virus, they develop shingles. According to the Exogenous Boosting Hypothesis (EBH), a person’s ability to keep VZV suppressed can be ‘booste…Read more
-
108The Irrelevance of Origins: Dementia, Advance Directives, and the Capacity for PreferencesAmerican Journal of Bioethics 20 (8): 98-100. 2020.We agree with Emily Walsh (2020) that the current preferences of patients with dementia should sometimes supersede those patients’ advance directives. We also agree that consensus clinical ethics guidance does a poor job of explaining the moral value of such patients’ preferences. Furthermore, Walsh correctly notes that clinicians are often averse to treating patients with dementia over their objections, and that this aversion reflects clinical wisdom that can inform revisions to clinical ethics…Read more
Auburn Hills and Rochester Hills, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Applied Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |