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How the IVF Industry Exploits Down Syndrome Anxiety to Hard Sell the Controversial PGT-A Technique
In vitro fertilization (IVF) is emotionally and financially taxing, especially for women of advanced maternal age. As maternal age increases, the risk of chromosomal abnormalities (aneuploidy) in embryos rises, heightening fears of conditions like Trisomy 21, or Down syndrome. Capitalizing on this anxiety, the IVF industry heavily promotes Preimplantation Genetic Testing for Aneuploidy (PGT-A) as […]
Mapping the Moral Brain: Probing the Architecture of Ethical Decision-Making with TMS
There is growing research interest in the prevalence of moral injury – a profound psychological harm caused by judgments which deviate from what an individual or society views as “right” – among those who have been exposed to trauma, such as veterans and survivors of abuse. However, what makes a judgment “moral”? Philosophers have long […]
Centering Our Social World in Planetary Health Research Ethics
This editorial appears in the June Issue of the American Journal of Bioethics Planetary ethics, or examining the moral relationship between humans and the physical world, is a growing field of inquiry related to the broader discipline of environmental ethics. Essentially, more people interested in the health of our planet and the negative impact humans […]
Ashley Revisited: Reflections and Lessons Twenty Years Later
This editorial appears in the June Issue of the American Journal of Bioethics Twenty years ago, Dan Gunther and I published our experience using high-dose estrogen to attenuate the growth of a young girl with severe and permanent neurodevelopmental disability that left her non-verbal, non-ambulatory, and completely dependent on others for her care. Gunther was […]