AJOB Volume 18, Issue 5
Related posts
The Orwellification of the CDC
“War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is strength” (George Orwell, 1984) According to the CDC website, the “CDC serves the American public—individuals, families, and communities—who rely on accurate data, health guidance, and preventive measures.” Unfortunately, accurate, evidence-based information dispelling the link between autism and vaccines has been removed from the CDC website, per the […]
Heartstrings and Hardware: Navigating the Ethics of LOVOTs in Elder Care
A group of researchers at the University of British Columbia’s IDEA Lab recently invited older adults living with dementia and their family care partners to sit with, hold, and observe an unlikely new inhabitant of long-term care: the soft-bodied, wide-eyed companion robot known as LOVOT. In their recent critical reflection study, published in Digital Health, the authors […]
How to Write a Winning Normative Bioethics Paper: Lessons from an Editor and Author
Normative bioethics writing can be deceptively hard; what feels like a sharp argument to you might read as unclear, under-motivated, or too abstract to reviewers. As both an author and an editor, I’ve seen hundreds of manuscripts succeed—and many stumble. In this piece, based on my panel presentation at ASBH 2025, I share the most […]
Parental Reasons, Ethical Responses: Mapping the Debate Over Parental Reasons in Pediatric Bioethics
This editorial appears in the November 2025 Issue of the American Journal of Bioethics Navigating conflict over medical decisions for children is a central theme in pediatric bioethics, an ever-present challenge for clinicians at the bedside and the topic of considerable scholarly work by bioethicists. Much of the debate focuses on what parents decide for […]