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University Responses to Student Protests: Anti-Principle, Anti-Ethical, and Anti-Academic
No matter your views about the chaos in the world around us, what we, as bioethicists, have been witnessing at Columbia University should be of concern. By way of full disclosure, I am not only an academic bioethicist but the parent of a graduating senior at Columbia University. By allowing police to remove protesters, a […]
From Opioid Overdose to LVAD Refusals: Navigating the Spectrum of Decisional Autonomy
The following editorial can be found in the May 2024 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics. In “Revive and Refuse: Capacity, Autonomy, and Refusal of Care After Opioid Overdose”, Marshall, Derse, Weiner, and Joseph contend that patients who may appear to satisfy the standard criteria for decision-making capacity could nevertheless be making non-autonomous refusals of […]
Reopening the ‘Window to the Soul’?: The Ethics of Eye Transplantation Now and in the Future
The following editorial can be found in the May 2024 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics. Of all the five senses losing sight is the one that individuals fear the most. Worldwide blindness has afflicted tens of millions of people each year. Historically, this has inspired researchers and doctors to try whole eye transplants (WET). […]
Why Patients Leave: The Role of Stigma and Discrimination in Decisions to Refuse Post-Overdose Treatment
The following editorial can be found in the May 2024 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics. In 2022, an estimated 110,000 people died of an opioid-related drug overdose in the United States primarily related to illicit fentanyl. However, fatal overdoses comprise only a portion of all overdoses in any given year, since the majority […]