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87Physical restraint elimination in the acute care setting: Ethical considerations (review)HEC Forum 10 (3): 244-262. 1998.
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75Morally Managing Medical MistakesCambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 9 (1): 38-53. 2000.Mistakes and errors happen in most spheres of human life and activity, including in medicine. A mistake can be as simple and benign as the collection of an extra and unnecessary urine sample. Or a mistake can cause serious but reversible harm, such as an overdose of insulin in a patient with diabetes, resulting in hypoglycemia, seizures, and coma. Or a mistake can result in serious and permanent damage for the patient, such as the failure to consider epiglottitis in an initial differential diagn…Read more
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61Religious Insistence on Medical Treatment: Christian Theology and Re‐ImaginationHastings Center Report 26 (4): 23-30. 1996.Families and surrogates sometimes use religious themes to justify their insistence on aggressive end‐of‐life care. Their hope that “God will work a miracle” can halt negotiations with health care professionals and lead to litigation. The possibility of “re‐imagining” religious themes, to broaden their scope and present a wider vision of the Christian tradition, may offer a solution.
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25Family Members’ Requests to Extend Physiologic Support after Declaration of Brain Death: A Case Series Analysis and Proposed Guidelines for Clinical ManagementJournal of Clinical Ethics 25 (3): 222-237. 2014.We describe and analyze 13 cases handled by our ethics consultation service (ECS) in which families requested continuation of physiological support for loved ones after death by neurological criteria (DNC) had been declared. These ethics consultations took place between 2005 and 2013. Patients’ ages ranged from 14 to 85. Continued mechanical ventilation was the focal intervention sought by all families. The ECS’s advice and recommendations generally promoted “reasonable accommodation” of the req…Read more
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64The goals of ethics consultation: Rejecting the role of "ethics police"American Journal of Bioethics 7 (2). 2007.We congratulate Fox and her colleagues (2007) for contributing to the published empirical literature on ethics consultation in United States hospitals. Their study demonstrates the continued wide v...
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64Should possible disparities and distrust trump do-no-harm?American Journal of Bioethics 6 (5). 2006.This Article does not have an abstract
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78Criteria for determining the appropriate method for an ethics consultationHEC Forum 16 (2): 95-113. 2004.
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123Chaplaincy and Clinical Ethics: A Common Set of QuestionsHastings Center Report 38 (6): 28-29. 2008.
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61Accommodating Religious Beliefs in the ICU: A Narrative Account of a Disputed DeathNarrative Inquiry in Bioethics 1 (1): 55-64. 2011.Conflicts of interest. None to report. Despite widespread acceptance in the United States of neurological criteria to determine death, clinicians encounter families who object, often on religious grounds, to the categorization of their loved ones as “brain dead.” The concept of “reasonable accommodation” of objections to brain death, promulgated in both state statutes and the bioethics literature, suggests the possibility of compromise between the family’s deeply held beliefs and the legal, prof…Read more
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54The Gift of Life and the Common Good: The Need for a Communal Approach to Organ ProcurementHastings Center Report 31 (1): 29-35. 2001.Its critics to the contrary, the “gift of life” metaphor is not to be blamed for the indebtedness and guilt that organ recipients often experience. It is certainly misused, however, both by post‐transplant caregivers, who exploit it to manipulate recipients' behavior, and by the organ procurement system, which has failed to understand that the decision to give the gift of life must be approached communally.
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28Aaron Rizzieri: Pragmatic Encroachment, Religious Belief and Practice. Palgrave 2013European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 9 (1): 221--224. 2017.
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57Bad WordsHastings Center Report 44 (2): 13-14. 2014.The clinical ethicist met with Ms. H to clarify what information she wants and does not want to know. First, she wants to receive any treatment that could prolong her life, regardless of how the treatment affects her ability to engage in activities of daily living. Second, she wants to be included in the decision‐making process as much as possible, as long as clinicians use only “positive” language. Ms. H considers the words “dying,” “chemotherapy,” “radiation,” and “cancer” to be “bad words.” F…Read more
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93A Pilot Evaluation of Portfolios for Quality Attestation of Clinical Ethics ConsultantsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 16 (3): 15-24. 2016.Although clinical ethics consultation is a high-stakes endeavor with an increasing prominence in health care systems, progress in developing standards for quality is challenging. In this article, we describe the results of a pilot project utilizing portfolios as an evaluation tool. We found that this approach is feasible and resulted in a reasonably wide distribution of scores among the 23 submitted portfolios that we evaluated. We discuss limitations and implications of these results, and sugge…Read more
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39Desperately Seeking a Surrogate—For a Patient Lacking Decision–Making CapacityNarrative Inquiry in Bioethics 4 (2): 161-169. 2014.Our hospital’s policy and procedures for “Patients Without Surrogates” provides for gradated safeguards for managing patients’ treatment and care when they lack decision–making capacity, have no advance directives, and no surrogate decision makers are available. The safeguards increase as clinical decisions become more significant and have greater consequences for the patient. The policy also directs social workers to engage in “rigorous efforts” to search for surrogates who can potentially prov…Read more
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35Standardizing consultation processes is increasingly important as clinical ethics consultation becomes more utilized in and vital to medical practice. Solid organ transplant represents a relatively nascent field replete with complex ethical issues that, while explored, have not been systematically classified. In this paper, we offer a proposed taxonomy that divides issues of resource allocation from viable solutions to the issue of organ shortage in transplant and then further distinguishes betw…Read more
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61“Systematizing” Ethics Consultation ServicesHEC Forum 27 (1): 35-45. 2015.While valuable work has been done addressing clinical ethics within established healthcare systems, we anticipate that the projected growth in acquisitions of community hospitals and facilities by large tertiary hospitals will impact the field of clinical ethics and the day-to-day responsibilities of clinical ethicists in ways that have yet to be explored. Toward the goal of providing clinical ethicists guidance on a range of issues that they may encounter in the systematization process, we disc…Read more
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13The parameters of ethics consultationIn D. Micah Hester & Toby Schonfeld (eds.), Guidance for healthcare ethics committees, Cambridge University Press. pp. 32. 2012.
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82A Second ChanceHastings Center Report 43 (1): 12-13. 2013.Mr. F. is a fifty‐year‐old father of two school‐aged daughters. Six years ago, he received a double lung transplant because he was suffering from interstitial lung disease, a fatal illness that causes suffocation by progressive scarring of the lungs. He is now experiencing chronic rejection of the transplant and is being considered to receive another. Without it, he is expected to survive only a year and a half. With it, his prognosis will improve, but the numbers are still not good. Three years…Read more
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89Practical Guidance for Charting Ethics ConsultationsHEC Forum 26 (1): 79-93. 2014.It is generally accepted that appropriate documentation of activities and recommendations of ethics consultants in patients’ medical records is critical. Despite this acceptance, the bioethics literature is largely devoid of guidance on key elements of an ethics chart note, the degree of specificity that it should contain, and its stylistic tenor. We aim to provide guidance for a variety of persons engaged in clinical ethics consultation: new and seasoned ethics committee members who are new to …Read more
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Mission, vision, goals : defining the parameters of ethics consultationIn D. Micah Hester & Toby Schonfeld (eds.), Guidance for healthcare ethics committees, Cambridge University Press. 2012.
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University of LiverpoolPost-doctoral fellow
Liverpool, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland