•  13
    Tyler Tate replies
    Hastings Center Report 53 (4): 46-47. 2023.
    The author responds to a letter by D. Brendan Johnson in the July‐August 2023 issue of the Hastings Center Report concerning his and Joseph Clair's article “Love Your Patient as Yourself: On Reviving the Broken Heart of American Medical Ethics.”
  •  23
    Empathy is sometimes so hard to achieve that one may wonder if it is a virtue for caregivers at all. Perhaps a caregiver cannot always know how a patient feels, and perhaps that knowledge is sometimes too painful to possess. A nuanced understanding of what empathy entails and of the conditions for attaining it can help ground its possibility.
  •  19
    This article presents a radical claim: American medical ethics is broken, and it needs love to be healed. Due to a unique set of cultural and economic pressures, American medical ethics has adopted a mechanistic mode of ethical reasoning epitomized by the doctrine of principlism. This mode of reasoning divorces clinicians from both their patients and themselves. This results in clinicians who can ace ethics questions on multiple‐choice tests but who fail either to recognize a patient's humanity …Read more
  •  12
    “A Shell of My Former Self”: Using Figurative Language to Promote Communication About Patient Suffering
    with Elizabeth Stein and Robert Pearlman
    Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics. forthcoming.
  •  8
    When Following the Rules Feels Wrong
    Hastings Center Report 51 (1): 4-5. 2021.
    The Covid‐19 pandemic has created a clinical environment in which health care practitioners are experiencing moral distress in numerous and novel ways. In this narrative reflection, a pediatric palliative care physician explores how his hospital's strict visitation policy set the stage for moral distress when, in the early months of the pandemic, it prevented two parents from being together at the bedside of their dying child.
  •  14
    What we talk about when we talk about pediatric suffering
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 41 (4): 143-163. 2020.
    In this paper I aim to show why pediatric suffering must be understood as a judgment or evaluation, rather than a mental state. To accomplish this task, first I analyze the various ways that the label of suffering is used in pediatric practice. Out of this analysis emerge what I call the twin poles of pediatric suffering. At one pole sits the belief that infants and children with severe cognitive impairment cannot suffer because they are nonverbal or lack subjective life experience. At the other…Read more
  •  16
    Philosophical investigations into the essence of pediatric suffering
    Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 41 (4): 137-142. 2020.
  •  10
    There are two widespread beliefs about the use of metaphors in clinical medicine. The first is that military metaphors are harmful to patients and should be discouraged in medical practice. The second is that the metaphors of clinical practice can be judged by and standardized in reference to neutral criteria. In this article, I evaluate both these beliefs, exposing their shared flawed logic. This logic underwrites the false empiricist assumptions that metaphorical language and literal language …Read more
  •  28
    What We Mean When We Talk About Suffering—and Why Eric Cassell Should Not Have the Last Word
    with Robert Pearlman
    Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 62 (1): 95-110. 2019.
    Marie was 15 when her abdominal pain began. After two years of negative work-ups, countless visits to gastroenterologists, and over 70 days of high school missed, she found herself readmitted to the hospital. “Refractory abdominal pain” was her ostensible diagnosis; “troubled teen” who was “going to be difficult” was embedded in the emergency department’s sign-out. When the medical team arrived to meet Marie, she was huddled in the corner of her hospital bed, silent and withdrawn. Her intern not…Read more
  •  25
    The Church, the State, and Vaccine Policy
    with Saad B. Omer, Douglas J. Opel, and Robert A. Bednarczyk
    American Journal of Bioethics 17 (4): 50-52. 2017.
  •  22
    Military Metaphors in Health Care: Who Are We Actually Trying to Help?
    with Robert A. Pearlman
    American Journal of Bioethics 16 (10): 15-17. 2016.
  •  11
    The Clue
    Hastings Center Report 47 (2): 3-4. 2017.
    As I stood outside of Carlos's room, I felt caught on the horns of a dilemma. It seemed impossible to truly “be there” for Carlos without sacrificing my other intern duties. This tension pervaded much of my residency training, as I often found myself spending more time completing chart notes, answering pages, and giving sign out than I did at the bedside with my patients. I knew I had a duty to “do my job”—I could not let my team down. But what about my duty to Carlos, a duty to act on my intuit…Read more