Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Bioethics and Medical Ethics Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2,690 Full-Text Articles 3,151 Authors 2,096,559 Downloads 222 Institutions

All Articles in Bioethics and Medical Ethics

Faceted Search

2,690 full-text articles. Page 4 of 78.

The Brain On Death Row: Reconciling Neuroscience & Categorical Exemptions From Execution, Alexa Johnson-Gomez 2023 University of Minnesota Law School

The Brain On Death Row: Reconciling Neuroscience & Categorical Exemptions From Execution, Alexa Johnson-Gomez

Minnesota Journal of Law, Science & Technology

No abstract provided.


Maldi-Tof Ms Based Proteomic Fingerprinting Of Total Serum Plasma For Somatic Pain Syndromes, Isaiah Pinkerton, Venkateswar Venkataraman 2023 Rowan University

Maldi-Tof Ms Based Proteomic Fingerprinting Of Total Serum Plasma For Somatic Pain Syndromes, Isaiah Pinkerton, Venkateswar Venkataraman

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

There are racial and ethnic disparities regarding pain management within the United States, and that disproportionately affects women of color. There is also a fundamental lack of information regarding the biological mechanism by which pain sensitization and perception occurs, and how it could be affected by both neurologic and somatic pain syndromes.

Methods: Research was performed on principal electronic scientific databases including Google Scholar, PubMed, and Embase with search terms “MALDI-TOF”, “ESI-MS”, “Pain”, and “Biomarkers”, as well as other modifiers to narrow the literature search.

Results: Studies on comparison between MALDI-TOF and other traditional analysis platforms, including Electrospray Ionization (ESI-MS), …


Evaluation Of Available Medical Interpretation Resources Available To Spanish-Speaking Patients In Nj Ahec Counties, Magdalene Lederer, Cindy Nativi, Madhav Patel, Joseph Mendoza, Nhi Tran, Yesha Patel, Melissa Vincent, Rebecca Moore 2023 Rowan University

Evaluation Of Available Medical Interpretation Resources Available To Spanish-Speaking Patients In Nj Ahec Counties, Magdalene Lederer, Cindy Nativi, Madhav Patel, Joseph Mendoza, Nhi Tran, Yesha Patel, Melissa Vincent, Rebecca Moore

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

According to the US Census Bureau Spanish is the most common non-English language spoken in the US. Despite the growing population of Spanish-speaking individuals, most healthcare providers can only communicate in English. Linguistic differences between patients and providers have been identified to impact the quality of care received, therefore, it is not surprising that Spanish-speaking patients have been found to be less satisfied with healthcare. Language barriers in healthcare lead to poor compliance and underuse of services which eventually negatively impact health outcomes. Several studies found that the most effective communication tools are often underutilized, with healthcare providers relying on …


Healthcare Disparities In The Lgbtqia+ Community: A Scoping Review Of Community Vs Provider Experiences, Uttara Hardikar, Alisha Vincent, Venkateswar Venkataman, Millicent Channell 2023 Rowan University

Healthcare Disparities In The Lgbtqia+ Community: A Scoping Review Of Community Vs Provider Experiences, Uttara Hardikar, Alisha Vincent, Venkateswar Venkataman, Millicent Channell

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

Background: It is well-established that healthcare disparities exist in the LGBTQIA+ community. The divide is a growing concern exacerbated by recent changes in the healthcare and sociopolitical climate. To eliminate this divide and find ways to deliver better outcomes to the LGBTQIA+ is a dire need. This report analyzes the possible reasons from the community as well as the providers perspective, with a goal to find best practices that could be implemented in both components.

Methods: A scoping literature review was carried out as described below to collect perspectives from both sides: patients as well as providers.

Results: From patient …


The Blurred Lines Between Medicine And Wellness: A Historical Approach Comparing Osteopathic Physicians, Chiropractors, And Physical Therapists, Heather Soled, Dylan Trawinski, Sonya Priven, Sheam Jahan 2023 Rowan University

The Blurred Lines Between Medicine And Wellness: A Historical Approach Comparing Osteopathic Physicians, Chiropractors, And Physical Therapists, Heather Soled, Dylan Trawinski, Sonya Priven, Sheam Jahan

Rowan-Virtua Research Day

In modern society, there stands a large number of medical titles with nuances that complicate the layperson’s ability to differentiate standard of care and capabilities. As the world evolves, new job opportunities in the medical and related fields are being constructed to provide positions with various levels of certifications that qualify many caregivers to provide similar and often coexisting levels of care. Some disciplines may agree or disagree on principle; this is just one point of confusion for the mass. Furthermore, disciplines that disagree on principle may still apply analogous treatment models. Such confusion has yielded several challenges for less …


The Pink Tax: A Comparative Case Study Between Tennessee And Washington State, Megha Chitturi 2023 University of Tennessee, Knoxville

The Pink Tax: A Comparative Case Study Between Tennessee And Washington State, Megha Chitturi

Baker Scholar Projects

The imposition of an additional luxury tax on menstrual health products, otherwise referred to as the “Pink Tax” or the “Tampon Tax”, is present in some states while absent in others. The decision to repeal such a tax is one that has proven to be critical, as it removes the connotation that such products are of “luxury” and make them more accessible to menstruators throughout the state. As of 2023, twenty-three states have eliminated the tax. The state of Washington falls under that parameter while Tennessee does not. The purpose of this undergraduate honors thesis is to explore the potential …


Ballad Health: Understanding Appalachia’S Regional Healthcare Monopoly, Meredith A. Bailey 2023 University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Ballad Health: Understanding Appalachia’S Regional Healthcare Monopoly, Meredith A. Bailey

Baker Scholar Projects

The Ballad Health merger of 2018, which combined the now 21 hospitals in the region under one organization, has impacted the healthcare landscape in Northeast Tennessee and Southwest Virginia. Historically, Appalachia has had to persevere through primary physician shortages, a lack of specialty care, geographic obstacles to accessing healthcare, challenges related to substance abuse, and much more. Since the merger of Mountain States Health Alliance and Wellmont Health System, little research has been done to assess the perceived impact the aggregation of providers has had on the population it serves. This study utilizes an online survey to better understand the …


Analyzing Medical Student Call To Action Letters Following 2020 Black Lives Matter Protests, Nick McMillen, Jason A. Wasserman 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Analyzing Medical Student Call To Action Letters Following 2020 Black Lives Matter Protests, Nick Mcmillen, Jason A. Wasserman

Posters

The Flexner Report, written in 1910, may have revolutionized medical education, but it also recommended and led to the closure of all but two Black medical schools. While recent decades have lead to increased attention to diversity and inclusion, representation of historically marginalized groups among students and faculty has been slow to materialize.

Black Lives Matter protests encouraged a national dialogue over the need for more effective DEI initiatives and increased antiracist material in medical school curricula. Organizations such as White Coats 4 Black Lives developed “Call to Action” letters to medical school administrations across the country.


Conceptualization Of Evidence Used By Surrogate Decision-Makers To Determine A Patient’S Wishes, Michael Bourgoin, Zach Armstrong, Abram Brummett, Mark C. Navin, Jason Wasserman, Stephanie Swanberg 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Conceptualization Of Evidence Used By Surrogate Decision-Makers To Determine A Patient’S Wishes, Michael Bourgoin, Zach Armstrong, Abram Brummett, Mark C. Navin, Jason Wasserman, Stephanie Swanberg

Posters

Many modern concepts within clinical bioethics can be conceptualized in various ways. This subjectivity is demonstrated when analyzing ideas in the literature about the types of evidence that can or should be used by surrogate decision-makers to determine a patient’s wishes. This project aims to explore normative claims on this topic in order to map out the current landscape of the various understandings of this concept.


Self-Triage Among Patients Who Are Homeless, Jimmy Clemmens, Jason Wasserman 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Self-Triage Among Patients Who Are Homeless, Jimmy Clemmens, Jason Wasserman

Posters

People who are homeless present to urban emergency departments at a higher rate per 1000 people than those who are housed.1 With those added difficulties, people who are homeless frequently turn to Emergency Departments for primary, rather than only emergency, health care treatment.2,3 There is great need for investigation into the thought process for the self-triage of the patient who is homeless. This study was undertaken to survey adults at HOPE adult shelter about their ability to determine the most appropriate place to seek treatment for different common conditions of varying acuity, as well as to evaluate the efficacy of …


Compassion Fatigue Seen In Ems Workers Treating Chronic Opioid Users, Amelia Kruse, Jason Wasserman 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Compassion Fatigue Seen In Ems Workers Treating Chronic Opioid Users, Amelia Kruse, Jason Wasserman

Posters

Opioid use and misuse has been rising nationwide since 1999, as have the number of opioid-related deaths. This has not been limited to illicit drug use, but accelerated by prescribing practices that have ignored concerns about addiction. Emergency services have seen an increasingly high volume of opioid overdose and injury patients, but little additional support to respond to this crisis. This study seeks to investigate EMS workers perceptions of the opioid crisis and the barriers they face to providing adequate response.


Conceptualization Of Intervention In Pediatrics Systematic Review, Kaitlyn Hansen, Mark C. Navin, Jason Wasserman, Stephanie Swanberg 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Conceptualization Of Intervention In Pediatrics Systematic Review, Kaitlyn Hansen, Mark C. Navin, Jason Wasserman, Stephanie Swanberg

Posters

Navigating when to intervene against parents’ wishes is a difficult task in pediatrics. Different frameworks have been proposed, but disagreements remain. One problem debated about in pediatric intervention principles often refer to different kinds of interventions (e.g. calling Child Protective Services, consulting the Ethics Committee). This project reports results of a critical scoping review of recent bioethics literature about the concept of pediatric intervention principles.


Outbreak Risks At Religious Schools: Prevalence Of Nonmedical Vaccination Exemptions Among Michigan Kindergartens, Flora Martz, Patrick Karabon, Mark C. Navin 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Outbreak Risks At Religious Schools: Prevalence Of Nonmedical Vaccination Exemptions Among Michigan Kindergartens, Flora Martz, Patrick Karabon, Mark C. Navin

Posters

Religious community membership is relevant to immunization policy, as in the case of 2019 US measles outbreaks clustered in Orthodox Jewish communities. US immunization policy focuses on school enrollment requirements, which apply both to public and private (usually religiously-affiliated) schools. Most US states exempt students from these requirements for nonmedical reasons, including religious reasons, though some states, including New York, California, and Maine, have recently eliminated nonmedical exemptions. This study uses 2017-18 data from the state of Michigan to illuminate relationships between nonmedical exemption (NME) rates and attendance at religious schools with the aim of providing information about high-value targets …


What Exactly Is A Patient's Best Interest, Saketh Akula, Joshua Jones, Jason Wasserman, Mark C. Navin, Abram Brummett 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

What Exactly Is A Patient's Best Interest, Saketh Akula, Joshua Jones, Jason Wasserman, Mark C. Navin, Abram Brummett

Posters

In any clinical setting, the patient’s preferences are respected and valued by the medical team. As clear as that may seem, that can be tough when considering all the perspectives of what makes up a patient’s best interest (BI), especially for a minor. In the literature, there is wide disagreement about the interpretation of BI. The primary goal of this project is to unearth the perspectives that play into a pediatric patient’s best interest and delineate how and whether family interests should be considered.


Conceptualization Of Effective Surrogate Decision Making, Zachary Armstrong, Michael Bourgoin, Abram Brummett, Jason Wasserman, Mark C. Navin, Stephanie Swanberg 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Conceptualization Of Effective Surrogate Decision Making, Zachary Armstrong, Michael Bourgoin, Abram Brummett, Jason Wasserman, Mark C. Navin, Stephanie Swanberg

Posters

Surrogate decision making is a key component in the hierarchy of medical decisions, whereby an assigned individual makes choices on behalf of a patient incapable of making the decision themselves. Although this is common in healthcare, there are still many questions about best surrogate practices and ethical credibility. This capstone project aspires to map these concepts and discuss issues related to the current landscape of surrogate decision making with regards to medical ethics through the use of a systematic literature review.


Differences In Rational And Relational Autonomy During End-Of-Life Care, Michael Balce, Mark C. Navin, Abram Brummett, Jason Wasserman 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Differences In Rational And Relational Autonomy During End-Of-Life Care, Michael Balce, Mark C. Navin, Abram Brummett, Jason Wasserman

Posters

Within biomedical ethics, the principle of autonomy focuses on a patient’s right to make choices about his or her medical decisions and care. Along these lines, patients can then make decisions based on their own beliefs, attitudes, and customs, which is referred to as rational autonomy. However, shared-decision making is often more complicated than this, and patients often desire input from their spouse, family, and other trusted individuals, which is termed relational autonomy. These two concepts of autonomy drive different approaches to an individual’s perceptions and choices regarding medical-decision making during the end of one’s life.


The Ethics Of Medical Interventions Against Parental Consent, Corey Carney, Mark C. Navin, Jason Wasserman, Abram Brummett, Kaitlyn Hanson 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

The Ethics Of Medical Interventions Against Parental Consent, Corey Carney, Mark C. Navin, Jason Wasserman, Abram Brummett, Kaitlyn Hanson

Posters

Between an adult patient and physician they are the only two people that have a say in the patient’s medical treatment with the patient having the final say. In pediatrics, there is a patient, parent, and physician which adds a third party that is a proxy decision maker for the child but lacks absolute authority over the child’s treatment. The goal of this study is to give a sense of the diversity of the pediatric ethics literature regarding parent/physician disagreements and to address ambiguities about pediatric interventions.


Concern For Authenticity In Rational And Relational Autonomy, Joshua J. Daniel, Abram Brummett, Mark C. Navin, Jason A. Wasserman 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Concern For Authenticity In Rational And Relational Autonomy, Joshua J. Daniel, Abram Brummett, Mark C. Navin, Jason A. Wasserman

Posters

The four principles of bioethics described by Beauchamp and Childress are beneficence, nonmaleficence, justice, and autonomy. Two definitions of autonomy are very commonly used: rational autonomy, which refers to a patient making decisions based on their own beliefs and customs, and relational autonomy, which refers to shared decision making with the input of a patient’s close trusted individuals. Beauchamp and Childress described autonomous actions as those with intention, understanding, and lack of controlling factors. A fourth component that is sometimes included is authenticity, or making decisions true to one’s self. The primary goal of this study is to determine whether …


'Best Interest' In Clinical Medicine: A Critical Scoping Review, Joshua R. Jones, Saketh Akula, Jason Wasserman, Mark Navin 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

'Best Interest' In Clinical Medicine: A Critical Scoping Review, Joshua R. Jones, Saketh Akula, Jason Wasserman, Mark Navin

Posters

The Best Interest Standard (BIS) has been a much-debated guidance principle in clinical ethics with ambiguous definition and application. In this study we focus on the conceptions of best interests that differ according to which kinds of interests are included. While there is wide agreement that ‘best interests’ include the physiological welfare of a patient, there is still substantial disagreement about which other interests are included in wider accounts of welfare, the balancing of those other interests, and whether interests are objective or subjective.


Medical Student Knowledge Of Physician Involvement In The Holocaust And The Importance Of Incorporating Holocaust Studies And Ethics Into Medical School Curricula, Megan Bricely, Jason Wasserman 2023 Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine Student

Medical Student Knowledge Of Physician Involvement In The Holocaust And The Importance Of Incorporating Holocaust Studies And Ethics Into Medical School Curricula, Megan Bricely, Jason Wasserman

Posters

A 2019 Claims Conference study demonstrated an alarming lack of knowledge about the Holocaust in the United States general population. There is currently no specific data on medical student knowledge of the Holocaust and the role that the medical community played. The goal of this study was to gather baseline data on medical student knowledge of the Holocaust and medicine’s involvement to demonstrate the need for Holocaust teaching in medical school.


Digital Commons powered by bepress