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A dementia directive — sometimes called an advance directive or living will — is a document in which a person, while still mentally capable, writes down their wishes for medical care if they can no longer communicate them. Think of it as a letter to the future: this is who I am, this is what […]
Shifting Tasks, Shifting Baselines: Mobile Health and the Limits of Empowerment
This editorial appears in the July Issue of the American Journal of Bioethics Jesse Gray’s article “On Mobile Health, Empowerment, and the Limits of Task Shifting in Healthcare,” has much to recommend it. Let me single out two features for particular praise: First, treating the idea of task-shifting as one for normative interrogation by bioethicists […]
AI Ethics 2.0: Why Frontier AI Demands a New Governance Agenda for Healthcare
AI Ethics 2.0: Why Frontier AI Demands a New Governance Agenda for Healthcare This editorial appears in the July Issue of the American Journal of Bioethics In February 2026, leaders from industry, government, policy, and academia gathered at New York University for a Summit on Building Governance Infrastructure for Frontier AI. The aim was ambitious […]
OMB Proposed Rule Change: The New Lysenkoism?
The proposed OMB rule changes (OMB-2026-0034) are problematic and should be withdrawn or substantially altered. At a fundamental level, the rules represent an attack on the peer review process and replace it with an explicitly political, vague, and poorly defined standard and process for review that is more likely to hinder science than promote it. […]