Treuman Katz Center for Pediatric Bioethics
Seattle Childrens Hospital
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On Kinship and Bioethical Interdependence
We are related, you and I. According to genealogical analysis, the likelihood that we have recent common ancestors is significant. This is not theoretical descendance from Lucy or Eve. This is kinship based on twenty to thirty generations of historical probing. Let that sink in. There is a good chance that you and I are […]
Bioethicists Must Push Back Against Assaults on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
This editorial appears in the August 2025 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics Bioethics emerged in the shadow of World War II, a response to egregious violations of people’s rights at the hands of Nazi scientists. Subsequently, the field responded to revelations of appalling abuses of orphans, disabled children, poor women, and Black men with […]
Suffering Is Not Useless
This editorial appears in the August 2025 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics Echoing Ruth Macklin’s classic essay which challenged the assumption that dignity is a useful concept for bioethics, Nelson et al. offer a provocation regarding the concept of suffering. Is suffering useful? Like Macklin, Nelson et al. claim that concepts taken to be self-evident may […]
Protecting Earth: Not From Us, Not For Us, But With Us
Hello, fellow earthly citizen. I don’t know your offline identity, but I stumbled across your Reddit post late one night after a vivid debate with my pregnant friend. Even through the cold computer screen, I could feel your worry and anger. As I was scrolling through your deliberation on whether remaining childfree was “the best […]