keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38525365/consensus-based-ethical-best-practices-for-performing-educational-point-of-care-ultrasonography-in-the-emergency-department
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Samantha K Chao, Yiju T Liu, Charles W Kropf, Robert D Huang, Nik Theyyunni, Lindsay A Taylor, Janice I Firn, Ross Kessler, Daniel R Micheller, Alethia J Battles, Natalja P Rosculet, Emily E Ager, Alyssa A Valentyne, Christine J Schellack, John P Hennessy, Cameron White, Ryan V Tucker
OBJECTIVES: There is no standardized protocol for performing educational point-of-care ultrasonography (POCUS) that addresses patient-centered ethical issues such as obtaining informed consent. This study sought to define principles for ethical application of educational POCUS and develop consensus-based best practice guidance. METHODS: A questionnaire was developed by a trained ethicist after literature review with the help of a medical librarian. A diverse panel including experts in medical education, law, and bioethics; medical trainees; and individuals with no medical background was convened...
April 2024: AEM Education and Training
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38523964/unveiling-the-surge-a-comprehensive-analysis-of-e-scooter-related-injuries-at-an-urban-level-1-trauma-center-in-vilnius-lithuania-2018-2021
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kristupas A Suslavičius, Simonas Utkus, Valentinas Uvarovas, Tomas Sveikata, Sigitas Ryliškis
Background The surge in electric scooter (e-scooter) adoption in 2019 fueled by sharing platforms has raised safety concerns, leading to an increased incidence of e-scooter-related injuries. Despite regulatory efforts, there has been a notable rise in accidents, prompting a comprehensive investigation. This study conducted at the Republican Vilnius University Hospital (RVUH), a level 1 trauma center, is one of the first in the Baltic States aiming to analyze the causes, severity, and frequency of e-scooter injuries from 2018 to 2021...
February 2024: Curēus
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38523587/a-paradigm-shift-on-the-ethics-of-medical-large-language-models
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Thomas Grote, Philipp Berens
After a wave of breakthroughs in image-based medical diagnostics and risk prediction models, machine learning (ML) has turned into a normal science. However, prominent researchers are claiming that another paradigm shift in medical ML is imminent-due to most recent staggering successes of large language models-from single-purpose applications toward generalist models, driven by natural language. This article investigates the implications of this paradigm shift for the ethical debate. Focusing on issues like trust, transparency, threats of patient autonomy, responsibility issues in the collaboration of clinicians and ML models, fairness, and privacy, it will be argued that the main problems will be continuous with the current debate...
March 25, 2024: Bioethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38515428/bioethics-no-method-no-discipline
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bjørn Hofmann
This article raises the question of whether bioethics qualifies as a discipline. According to a standard definition of discipline as "a field of study following specific and well-established methodological rules" bioethics is not a specific discipline as there are no explicit "well-established methodological rules." The article investigates whether the methodological rules can be implicit, and whether bioethics can follow specific methodological rules within subdisciplines or for specific tasks. As this does not appear to be the case, the article examines whether bioethics' adherence to specific quality criteria (instead of methodological rules) or pursuing of a common goal can make it qualify as a discipline...
March 22, 2024: Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: CQ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38515424/bioethics-and-public-policy-is-there-hope-for-public-reason
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leonard M Fleck
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 22, 2024: Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: CQ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38509687/-sit-down-and-thrash-it-out-opportunities-for-expanding-ethics-consultation-during-conflict-resolution-in-long-term-care
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David N Hoffman, Gianna R Strand
OBJECTIVE: To identify the frequency and nature of care conflict dilemmas that United States long-term care providers encounter, response strategies, and use of ethics resources to assist with dispute resolution. DESIGN: An online cross-sectional survey was distributed to the Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine (AMDA). RESULTS: Two-thirds of participants, primarily medical directors, have rejected surrogate instructions and 71% have managed family conflict...
March 20, 2024: New Bioethics: a Multidisciplinary Journal of Biotechnology and the Body
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38504033/novel-integration-of-a-health-equity-immersion-curriculum-in-medical-training
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kendra G Hotz, Allison Silverstein, Austin Dalgo
Health disparities education is an integral and required part of medical professional training, and yet existing curricula often fail to effectively denaturalize injustice or empower learners to advocate for change. We discuss a novel collaborative intervention that weds the health humanities to the field of health equity. We draw from the health humanities an intentional focus retraining provider imaginations by centering patient narratives; from the field of health equity, we draw the linkage between stigmatized social identities and health disparities...
March 20, 2024: Journal of Medical Humanities
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38500167/understanding-being-and-doing-of-bioethics-a-state-level-cross-sectional-study-of-knowledge-attitude-and-practice-among-healthcare-professionals
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Poovishnu Devi Thangavelu, Balamurugan Janakiraman, Renuka Pawar, Pravin H Shingare, Suresh Bhosale, Russel D Souza, Ivone Duarte, Rui Nunes
BACKGROUND: The field of bioethics examines the moral and ethical dilemmas that arise in the biological sciences, healthcare, and medical practices. There has been a rise in medical negligence cases, complaints against healthcare workers, and public dissatisfaction with healthcare professionals, according to reports from the Indian Medical Council and other healthcare associations. We intend to assess the level of knowledge, attitude, and practice of bioethics among the registered healthcare professionals (HCPs) of Maharashtra, India...
March 18, 2024: BMC Medical Ethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38495066/ethical-principles-in-plastic-surgery-research
#29
REVIEW
Hannes Prescher, Christian J Vercler
Research is an integral part of medical progress that leads to better understanding of disease processes and the development of therapies to improve patient care. The medical community has an obligation and societal responsibility to review its practices and advance its knowledge to optimize care for those who entrust it with their health and well-being. While ultimately intended to benefit patients specifically and society as a whole, every laboratory and clinical investigation inherently carries an element of uncertainty and has attendant risks...
February 2024: Seminars in Plastic Surgery
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38492184/embodiment-and-regenerative-implants-a-proposal-for-entanglement
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Manon van Daal, Anne-Floor J de Kanter, Karin R Jongsma, Annelien L Bredenoord, Nienke de Graeff
Regenerative Medicine promises to develop treatments to regrow healthy tissues and cure the physical body. One of the emerging developments within this field is regenerative implants, such as jawbone or heart valve implants, that can be broken down by the body and are gradually replaced with living tissue. Yet challenges for embodiment are to be expected, given that the implants are designed to integrate deeply into the tissue of the living body, so that implant and body become one. In this paper, we explore how regenerative implants may affect the embodied experience of implant recipients...
March 16, 2024: Medicine, Health Care, and Philosophy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38482288/living-will-todays-thoughts-and-actions
#31
REVIEW
Bhairavi Kale, Priyanka Jaiswal, Deepika Masurkar
INTRODUCTION: The word "Euthanasia" relates to two different words from the Greek language "Eu which indicates good and Thanatosis which indicates death", suggesting a "satisfactory Death" or "easy and painless Death" The phrase "mercy killing" has become associated with this meaning. It comprises inflicting painless death on a person suffering from an incurable and dreadful illness. It's the practice of terminating a person's life by administering a lethal injection or ceasing medical treatment...
January 2024: Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38480268/chapter-9-return-to-the-revision-of-the-bioethics-law-regarding-the-use-of-artificial-intelligence-in-the-field-of-medical-imaging
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christian Byk
On the occasion of the sixth AI international Summit (November 22-24, 2023), Professor Daniel Rueckert (Technical University of Munich) replies to our questions on ethical issues raised by the use of artificial intelligence in medical imaging.
2024: Journal International de Bioéthique et D'éthique des Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38478251/living-ethics-a-stance-and-its-implications-in-health-ethics
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eric Racine, Sophie Ji, Valérie Badro, Aline Bogossian, Claude Julie Bourque, Marie-Ève Bouthillier, Vanessa Chenel, Clara Dallaire, Hubert Doucet, Caroline Favron-Godbout, Marie-Chantal Fortin, Isabelle Ganache, Anne-Sophie Guernon, Marjorie Montreuil, Catherine Olivier, Ariane Quintal, Abdou Simon Senghor, Michèle Stanton-Jean, Joé T Martineau, Andréanne Talbot, Nathalie Tremblay
Moral or ethical questions are vital because they affect our daily lives: what is the best choice we can make, the best action to take in a given situation, and ultimately, the best way to live our lives? Health ethics has contributed to moving ethics toward a more experience-based and user-oriented theoretical and methodological stance but remains in our practice an incomplete lever for human development and flourishing. This context led us to envision and develop the stance of a "living ethics", described in this inaugural collective and programmatic paper as an effort to consolidate creative collaboration between a wide array of stakeholders...
March 13, 2024: Medicine, Health Care, and Philosophy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38472568/james-rachels-and-the-morality-of-euthanasia
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Timothy J Furlan
My fundamental thesis is that Rachels dismisses the traditional Western account of the morality of killing without offering a viable replacement. In this regard, I will argue that the substitute account he offers is deficient in at least eight regards: (1) he fails to justify the foundational principle of utilitarianism, (2) he exposes preference utilitarianism to the same criticisms he lodges against classical utilitarianism, (3) he neglects to explain how precisely one performs the maximization procedure which preference utilitarianism requires, (4) his account of the sanctity of life is subject to the very criticism he levels against the traditional position, (5) he cannot justify the exceptions he makes to his interpretation of the sanctity of life, (6) his account could easily be used to justify murder, (7) his embrace of autonomy as an ethical principle undermines his preference utilitarianism, and (8) he cannot maintain the moral identification of acts of killing and letting die...
March 12, 2024: Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38470400/arguments-for-a-ban-on-pediatric-intersex-surgery-a-dis-analogy-with-jehovah-witness-blood-transfusion
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Catherine Clune-Taylor
This article argues for a ban on the performance of medically unnecessary genital normalizing surgeries as part of assigning a binary sex/gender to infants with intersex conditions on the basis of autonomy, regardless of etiology. It does this via a dis/analogy with the classic case in bioethics of Jehovah Witness (JW) parents' inability to refuse life-saving blood transfusions for their minor children. Both cases address ethical medical practice in situations where parents are making irreversible medical decisions on the basis of values strongly held, identity, and relationship-shaping values-such as religious beliefs or beliefs regarding the inherent value of binary sex/gender-amidst ethical pluralism...
March 12, 2024: Bioethics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38469878/the-reasonable-content-of-conscience-in-public-bioethics
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Abram Brummett, Jason Eberl
Bioethicists aim to provide moral guidance in policy, research, and clinical contexts using methods of moral analysis (e.g., principlism, casuistry, and narrative ethics) that aim to satisfy the constraints of public reason. Among other objections, some critics have argued that public reason lacks the moral content needed to resolve bioethical controversies because discursive reason simply cannot justify any substantive moral claims in a pluralistic society. In this paper, the authors defend public reason from this criticism by showing that it contains sufficient content to address one of the perennial controversies in bioethics-the permissibility and limits of clinician conscientious objection...
March 12, 2024: Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: CQ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38468642/mutual-aid-praxis-aligns-principles-and-practice-in-grassroots-covid-19-responses-across-the-us
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nora Kenworthy, Emily Hops, Amy Hagopian
COVID-19 elicited a rapid emergence of new mutual aid networks in the US, but the practices of these networks are understudied. Using qualitative methods, we explored the empirical ethics guiding US-based mutual aid networks' activities, and assessed the alignment between principles and practices as networks mobilized to meet community needs during 2020-21. We conducted in-depth interviews with 15 mutual aid group organizers and supplemented these with secondary source materials on mutual aid activities and participant observation of mutual aid organizing efforts...
June 2023: Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38467446/clarifying-human-dignity-in-forensic-practice
#38
REVIEW
Ezra E H Griffith, Véronique A S Griffith
The notion of human dignity remains a relatively complex concept that has roots in classical Greek and Roman antiquity and links to religious teachings and Kantian philosophical notions. From the Latin dignitas , human dignity means worth and implies excellence and distinction. Human dignity, also found in 20th century constitutions and international declarations, has been considered in bioethics, general medicine, and psychiatry. The application of dignity to forensic psychiatry practice has received less attention...
March 11, 2024: Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38465673/public-reason-bioethics-and-public-policy-a-seductive-delusion-or-ambitious-aspiration
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Leonard M Fleck
Can Rawlsian public reason sufficiently justify public policies that regulate or restrain controversial medical and technological interventions in bioethics (and the broader social world), such as abortion, physician aid-in-dying, CRISPER-cas9 gene editing of embryos, surrogate mothers, pre-implantation genetic diagnosis of eight-cell embryos, and so on? The first part of this essay briefly explicates the central concepts that define Rawlsian political liberalism. The latter half of this essay then demonstrates how a commitment to Rawlsian public reason can ameliorate (not completely resolve) many of the policy disagreements related to bioethically controversial medical interventions today...
March 11, 2024: Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: CQ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38465666/how-populism-affects-bioethics
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gustavo Ortiz-Millán
This article aims at raising awareness about the intersection of populism and bioethics. It argues that illiberal forms of populism may have negative consequences on the evolution of bioethics as a discipline and on its practical objectives. It identifies at least seven potential negative effects: (1) The rise of populist leaders fosters "epistemological populism," devaluing the expert and scientific perspectives on which bioethics is usually based, potentially steering policies away from evidence-based foundations...
March 11, 2024: Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics: CQ
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