Räsänen, Joona
Published in
Monash bioethics review
Is it wrong to create a blind child, for example by in vitro fertilization, if you could create a sighted child instead? Intuitively many people believe it is wrong, but this belief is difficult to justify. When there is a possibility to create and select either 'blind' or 'sighted' embryos choosing a set of 'blind' embryos seems to harm no-one sin...
Clarke, Gemma Hussain, Jamilla Akhtar Allsop, Matthew John Bennett, Michael I
Published in
BMJ supportive & palliative care
Mosca, Colin Giovanni Kruger, Jaco P
Published in
African journal of emergency medicine : Revue africaine de la medecine d'urgence
The phenomenon of Financial Medicine is a wide spread practice within the South African prehospital domain, which remains poorly researched. Similarly the impact of this phenomenon is not well understood, with many healthcare providers grappling with the moral dilemmas introduced into the work systems through the effects of the practice of Financia...
Formstone, Matthew Wheeler, Robert
Published in
Archives of disease in childhood
Worthington, Ana Finlay, Ilora Regnard, Claud
Published in
BMJ supportive & palliative care
Most clinical teams and organisations have not openly or formally discussed how they would react if physician-assisted suicide were to be legalised. This paper aims to discuss some of the potential challenges of introducing 'assisted dying' into medical care and produces a table of questions and considerations in light of such evidence so as to pro...
Erler, Kimberly S Robinson, Ellen M Bandini, Julia I Regel, Eva V Zwirner, Mary Cremens, Cornelia McCoy, Thomas H Romain, Fred Courtwright, Andrew
Published in
HEC forum : an interdisciplinary journal on hospitals' ethical and legal issues
While a significant literature has appeared discussing theoretical ethical concerns regarding COVID-19, particularly regarding resource prioritization, as well as a number of personal reflections on providing patient care during the early stages of the pandemic, systematic analysis of the actual ethical issues involving patient care during this tim...
Shamoo, Adil E
Published in
Accountability in research
In 1898, the Treaty of Paris agreement concluding the Spanish-American War gave the US rights to claim and colonize Puerto Rico, the Philippines, and Guam. Along with the many consequences of such colonization came reports of significant harm to the native populations in healthcare and medical research by the occupying forces. Reports about unethic...
Brunning, Luke
Published in
Journal of medical ethics
In the UK, healthcare workers are again considering whether to strike, and the moral status of strike action is being publicly debated. Mpho Selemogo argued that we can think productively about the ethical status of healthcare strikes by using the ethical framework often applied to armed conflict (2014). On this view, strikes need to be just, propo...
Aucouturier, Etienne Grinbaum, Alexei
This deliverable presents qualitative research on training needs for research ethics committees (RECs), focusing on four technologies selected in the iRECS project: AI in Health and Healthcare, Biobanking, Genome-Editing and Extended Reality. Based on desk research, expert consultations, and a leadership roundtable, iRECS identifies gaps in the cur...
Ghosh, Manosij; 95907; Broothaerts, Katrijn; Ronsmans, Steven; 119717; Roig, Ingrid Barcena; Scheepers, Jef; Dikmen, Mustafa; Ciscato, Emily Rose; Blanch, Carolina; Plusquin, Michelle; Nygaard, Unni C;
...
Within collaborative projects, such as the EU-funded Horizon 2020 EXIMIOUS project (Mapping Exposure-Induced Immune Effects: Connecting the Exposome and the Immunome), collection and analysis of large volumes of data pose challenges in the domain of data management, with regards to both ethical and legal aspects. However, researchers often lack the...