AJOB Volume 16, Number 1
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Whose Values Define Value? Procedural Justice and the Personal Utility of Clinical Genomic Testing
This editorial appears in the May Issue of the American Journal of Bioethics The recent increases in the number of persons detained by ICE in the United States is affecting health care. Many health-care professionals and facilities that serve immigrant communities report a chilling Health Technology Assessment (HTA), and the value assessment frameworks that underlie […]
Caring for Autistic Adolescents: A Call for Improved Education of Clinicians and Caregivers
This editorial appears in the May Issue of the American Journal of Bioethics In their Target Article “Inpatient Hospitalization of Adolescents Diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder: An Ethical Analysis,” Hrycko and Sinderbrand argue that inpatient psychiatric hospitalization (“IPH”) creates lasting harms to autistic adolescents. They go on to state that autistic adolescents “are admitted to […]
Eviscerating the Voting Rights Act, Black Bioethics, and the Ancestors
When I was promoted and received tenure, I received a card from another Black woman professor that said, “The ancestors are moving mountains to see you rise.” As I made the news public, other Black professionals made reference to our ancestors, telling me things like “I’ve made the ancestors proud” or “I am my ancestors’ […]
Evaluating the Price of Oregon’s Psilocybin Services: Finding the Right Comparison
Oregon’s psilocybin services are often described as quite expensive in both media coverage and academic discussions. However, when making this claim, we should ask: expensive compared to what? Whether or not psilocybin services are considered too expensive may, in fact, depend in large part on whether their use is being thought of as healthcare, a luxury experience, a quasi-therapeutic […]