New Issue of Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics is Now Available

January 5, 2009

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics (Volume 18, Issue 1, January 2009) is now available by subscription only.

Articles Include:

  • “Lessons from the Injured Brain: A Bioethicist in the Vineyards of Neuroscience” by Joseph J. Fins, 7-13.
  • “Negative and Positive Claims of Conscience” by Mark R. Wicclair, 14-22.
  • “Responsibility and Priority in Liver Transplantation” by Walter Glannon, 23-35.
  • “Bioethics and Social Studies of Medicine: Overlapping Concerns” by Leigh Turner, 36-42.
  • “Why Can’t We All Just Get Along? A Comment on Turner’s Plea to Social Scientists and Bioethicists” by Raymond De Vries, 43-46.
  • “Culture, Subjectivity, and the Ethics of Patient-Centered Pain Care” by James Giordano, Joan C. Engbretson and Roland Benedikter, 47-56.
  • “Race-Based Medicine and Justice as Recognition: Exploring the Phenomenon of BiDil” by Joon-Ho Yu, Sara Goering and Stephanie M. Fullerton, 57-67.
  • “Migration and the Human Right to Health” by Phillip Cole, 70-77.
  • “The Health Impact Fund: Boosting Pharmaceutical Innovation Without Obstructing Free Access” by Thomas Pogge, 78-86.
  • “The Artificial Womb: A Pilot Study Considering People’s Views on the Artificial Womb and Ectogenesis in Israel” by Frida Simonstein and Michal Mashiach-Eizenberg, 87-94.
  • “Smoke and Mirrors: One Case for Ethical Obligations of the Physician as Public Role Model” by Jacob M. Appel, 95-100.

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