Name Stephanie Tillman CNM | Source meta
Stephanie Tillman CNM
Related posts
Why Bioethics Matters in the Debate Over Routine Infant Circumcision
Bioethics exists to help us think clearly about difficult medical decisions, especially when those decisions affect individuals who cannot speak for themselves. At its core, bioethics asks a set of enduring questions: Who decides? Who bears the risks? And what obligations do we have to protect the most vulnerable? These questions arise across medicine, but […]
The Promises and Challenges for Ethical Carebots
Our research team has recently completed a pilot study with groups of older adults (N=11) and family care partners (N=9) to interact with Sava, our humanoid Pepper robot that is trained to assist with conversation and emotional support. We studied the potential effects of socially assistive robots, or carebots, for supporting persons with mild cognitive […]
My Great Aunt Had a Choice. Bill 18 Threatens That for Others.
My great-aunt chose medical assistance in dying (MAiD) in Alberta, Canada. It was sad – all death is – but it brought us comfort knowing that her death was autonomous, compassionate and mattered. And now, legislation threatens to take that choice away from others. On March 18th, Alberta introduced Bill 18: the Safeguards for Last […]
Updating the Canon: The Story of Henrietta Lacks Is Not Over
Three cases appear in almost every bioethics course: the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, the death of Jesse Gelsinger, and the story of Henrietta Lacks. All three are taught as cautionary tales about what happens when research goes wrong. But only two of them have legal endings. Tuskegee led to congressional hearings, the Belmont Report, and the […]