New Issue of Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics is Now Available

June 24, 2011

Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics (Volume 20, Issue 3, July 2011) is now available by subscription only.

Articles include:

  • “Sprinting Research and Spot Jogging Regulation: The State of Bioethics in Cameroon” by Godfrey B. Tangwa and Nchangwi Synthia Munung, 356-366.
  • “Assisting Countries in Establishing National Bioethics Committees: UNESCO’s Assisting Bioethics Committees Project” by Henk Ten Have, Christophe Dikenou, and Dafna Feinholz, 380-388.
  • “Clinical Ethics Committees in Norway: What Do They Do, and Does It Make a Difference?” by Reidun Forde, and Reidar Pedersen, 389-395.
  • “Implications of Recent Developments in Ireland for the Status of the Embryo” by Sheelagh McGuinness and Sorcha Ui Chonnachtaigh, 396-408.
  • “Four Themes in Recent Swedish Bioethics Debates” by Gert Helgesson and Stefan Eriksson, 409-417.
  • “Does the United States Do It Better? A Comparative Analysis of Liver Allocation Protocols in the United Kingdom and the United States” by Lisa Cherkassky, 418-433.
  • “Bioethics in Serbia: Institutions in Need of Philosophical Debate” by Vojin Rakic and Petar Bojanic, 440-448.
  • “Egg Cell Preservation and the Right to Die in The Netherlands: Citizens’ Choices and the Limits of Medicine” by Dorothea P. Touwen, 449-457.
  • “Tensions between Medical Professionals and Patients in Mainland China” by Xinqing Zhang, Margaret Sleeboom-Faulkner, 458-465.