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The Community Becomes the Ethics Committee
In my roles at Columbia University Medical Center (CUMC), I often find myself bridging two worlds: the academic and the communal. As a Senior Research Staff Associate managing a longitudinal study on aging dementia and a member of the New York Presbyterian Adult Clinical Ethics Committee, I have come to learn a truth that many […]
America Needs a Marshall Plan for Saving the Future of Science
At the end of World War Two, most of Europe lay in ruins. The Nazis had been defeated but at a terrible price to both the allied nations and the axis powers, including Germany. A former U.S. ally, the Soviet Union, had emerged as a dangerous threat to Europe. On June 5, 1947, in a […]
How do we Mentor in This Moment?
I don’t know how to be a good mentor right now and I’m mad about it. Almost as soon as I completed my PhD I was put into mentor roles even though I was in a professional place where I still needed mentoring myself. Because my path to a PhD and to bioethics was unusual […]
Confusion Over “Abortion” (And Why It Matters)
In Dobbs v. Jackson, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the Constitution does not confer a right to abortion. Instead, regulatory authority has been returned to individual states. A fragmented legal landscape has resulted, where laws vary dramatically—and often confusingly—across jurisdictions. Healthcare providers, patients, and policymakers must now ask: What counts as an abortion? This […]