Provides educational information at the intersection of law, medicine, and ethics. Also provides information about two nationally acclaimed peer-reviewed journals.
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Death of a Healthcare CEO: Physical Violence, Structural Violence and Social (In)justice
“Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health is the most shocking and the most inhuman because it often results in physical death.” -Martin Luther King In a busy week of news that featured President Biden pardoning his son Hunter, the temporary declaration of martial law in South Korea, and the fall of the […]
Coercion, Power Relations, and the Expectations Patients Bring to Mental Health Treatment
This editorial appears in the December 2024 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics. When does an interaction between a mental health clinician and a patient cross the line from a reasonable offer of care to coercion? In a classic account of coercion in psychiatry, Szmukler and Appelbaum build from Wertheimer’s theory of coercion to propose that […]
Context Matters
This editorial appears in the December 2024 issue of the American Journal of Bioethics. Hempeler et al.’s focus on informal coercion in mental health treatment in this issue’s target article is critically important for multiple reasons, several of which warrant explicit recognition for their particular relevance to the current state of psychiatric practice. First, over time, much of […]
Poverty, Puritanism, and Popularity: The Resurgence of Eugenics through Viral Content Online
It began with a video of a pregnant mother narrating over a sped-up video of her rearranging kitchen furniture. She explained that her family of six was becoming seven and were all living in a one-bedroom apartment. She talked about the difficulties and how all of their children sleep in the living room and kitchen […]