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Articles 1 - 30 of 262
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2023
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2023
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2021
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2021
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Spring 2021
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Spring 2021
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Getting Real: The Maryland Healthcare Ethics Committee Network’S Covid‑19 Working Group Debriefs Lessons Learned, Norton Elson, Howard Gwon, Diane Hoffmann, Adam M. Kelmenson, Ahmed Khan, Joanne F. Kraus, Casmir C. Onyegwara, Gail Povar, Fatima Sheikh, Anita J. Tarzian
Getting Real: The Maryland Healthcare Ethics Committee Network’S Covid‑19 Working Group Debriefs Lessons Learned, Norton Elson, Howard Gwon, Diane Hoffmann, Adam M. Kelmenson, Ahmed Khan, Joanne F. Kraus, Casmir C. Onyegwara, Gail Povar, Fatima Sheikh, Anita J. Tarzian
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Disposable Lives: Covid-19, Vaccines, And The Uprising, Matiangai Sirleaf
Disposable Lives: Covid-19, Vaccines, And The Uprising, Matiangai Sirleaf
Faculty Scholarship
Two French doctors appeared on television and publicly discussed potentially utilizing African subjects in experimental trials for a tuberculosis vaccine as an antidote to the novel coronavirus (COVID-19). Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), denounced these kinds of racist remarks as a “hangover from ‘colonial mentality’” and maintained that “Africa can’t and won’t be a testing ground for any vaccine.” The fallout on social media was similarly swift, with Samuel Eto’o, a Cameroonian football legend, referring to the doctors as “[d]es assasins” and several others questioning the motives behind testing a vaccine on the African …
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2020
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2020
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Winter 2020
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Winter 2020
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Law & Health Care Newsletter, Fall 2019
Law & Health Care Newsletter, Fall 2019
Law & Health Care Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2019
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2019
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Law & Health Care Newsletter, Spring 2019
Law & Health Care Newsletter, Spring 2019
Law & Health Care Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2018
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2018
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Spring 2018
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Spring 2018
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2017
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2017
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2017
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2017
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Law-Based Arguments And Messages To Advocate For Later School Start Time Policies In The United States, Clark J. Lee, Dennis M. Nolan, Steven W. Lockley, Brent Pattison
Law-Based Arguments And Messages To Advocate For Later School Start Time Policies In The United States, Clark J. Lee, Dennis M. Nolan, Steven W. Lockley, Brent Pattison
Homeland Security Publications
The increasing scientific evidence that early school start times are harmful to the health and safety of teenagers has generated much recent debate about changing school start times policies for adolescent students. Although efforts to promote and implement such changes have proliferated in the United States in recent years, they have rarely been supported by law-based arguments and messages that leverage the existing legal infrastructure regulating public education and child welfare in the United States. Furthermore, the legal bases to support or resist such changes have not been explored in detail to date. This article provides an overview of how …
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2016
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2016
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Spring 2016
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Spring 2016
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Law & Healthcare Newsletter, Vol. 23, No. 2, Spring 2016
Law & Healthcare Newsletter, Vol. 23, No. 2, Spring 2016
Law & Health Care Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Winter 2016
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Winter 2016
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Sleep: A Human Rights Issue, Clark J. Lee
Sleep: A Human Rights Issue, Clark J. Lee
Homeland Security Publications
Recognition of sleep as a human rights issue by governmental and legal entities (as illustrated by recent legal cases in the United States and India) raises the profile of sleep health as a societal concern. Although this recognition may not lead to immediate public policy changes, it infuses the public discourse about the importance of sleep health with loftier ideals about what it means to be human. Such recognition also elevates the work of sleep researchers and practitioners from serving the altruistic purpose of improving human health at the individual and population levels to serving the higher altruistic purpose of …
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2015
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Fall 2015
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2015
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Summer 2015
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Just Compensation: A No-Fault Proposal For Research-Related Injuries, Leslie Meltzer Henry, Megan E. Larkin, Elizabeth R. Pike
Just Compensation: A No-Fault Proposal For Research-Related Injuries, Leslie Meltzer Henry, Megan E. Larkin, Elizabeth R. Pike
Faculty Scholarship
Biomedical research, no matter how well designed and ethically conducted, carries uncertainties and exposes participants to risk of injury. Research injuries can range from the relatively minor to those that result in hospitalization, permanent disability, or even death. Participants might also suffer a range of economic harms related to their injuries. Unlike the vast majority of developed countries, which have implemented no-fault compensation systems, the United States continues to rely on the tort system to compensate injured research participants—an approach that is no longer morally defensible. Despite decades of US advisory panels advocating for no-fault compensation, little progress has been …
Respect And Dignity: A Conceptual Model For Patients In The Intensive Care Unit, Leslie Meltzer Henry, Cynda Rushton, Mary Catherine Beach, Ruth Faden
Respect And Dignity: A Conceptual Model For Patients In The Intensive Care Unit, Leslie Meltzer Henry, Cynda Rushton, Mary Catherine Beach, Ruth Faden
Faculty Scholarship
Although the concept of dignity is commonly invoked in clinical care, there is not widespread agreement—in either the academic literature or in everyday clinical conversations—about what dignity means. Without a framework for understanding dignity, it is difficult to determine what threatens patients’ dignity and, conversely, how to honor commitments to protect and promote it. This article aims to change that by offering the first conceptual model of dignity for patients in the intensive care unit. The conceptual model we present is based on the notion that there are three sources of patients’ dignity—their shared humanity, personal narratives, and autonomy—each of …
Panel 1: Legal And Neuroscientific Perspectives On Chronic Pain, David Seminowicz, Amanda Pustilnik, Stephen Rigg, Andre Davis, Karen D. Davis, Hank Greely
Panel 1: Legal And Neuroscientific Perspectives On Chronic Pain, David Seminowicz, Amanda Pustilnik, Stephen Rigg, Andre Davis, Karen D. Davis, Hank Greely
Journal of Health Care Law and Policy
No abstract provided.
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Winter 2015
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter, Winter 2015
Mid-Atlantic Ethics Committee Newsletter
No abstract provided.
Neuroscience, Mindreading, And The Courts: The Example Of Pain, Henry T. Greely
Neuroscience, Mindreading, And The Courts: The Example Of Pain, Henry T. Greely
Journal of Health Care Law and Policy
No abstract provided.
Panel 2: “Excess” Pain, Hyperalgesia, And The Variability Of Subjective Experience, Amanda Pustilnik, David Seminowicz, Stephen Rigg, Joel Greenspan, Morris Hoffman, Adam Kolber, Michael Pardo
Panel 2: “Excess” Pain, Hyperalgesia, And The Variability Of Subjective Experience, Amanda Pustilnik, David Seminowicz, Stephen Rigg, Joel Greenspan, Morris Hoffman, Adam Kolber, Michael Pardo
Journal of Health Care Law and Policy
No abstract provided.
Panel 3: Chronic Pain, “Psychogenic” Pain, And Emotion, David Seminowicz, Amanda Pustilnik, M. Kaylie Gioioso, Jennifer Chandler, Robert Dinerstein, Jennifer A. Haythornthwaite, Tor D. Wager
Panel 3: Chronic Pain, “Psychogenic” Pain, And Emotion, David Seminowicz, Amanda Pustilnik, M. Kaylie Gioioso, Jennifer Chandler, Robert Dinerstein, Jennifer A. Haythornthwaite, Tor D. Wager
Journal of Health Care Law and Policy
No abstract provided.