A New Edition of Bioethics Is Now Available
December 13, 2019
Bioethics (vol. 33, no. 1, 2019) is available online by subscription only.
Articles include:
- “Erosion of Informed Consent in U.S. Research” by Lois Shepherd and Ruth Macklin
- “Our Flawed Approach to Undue Inducement in Medical Research” by Eric Lee
- “Enriching the Concept of Vulnerability in Research Ethics: An Integrative and Functional Account” by Eric Racine, Dearbhail Bracken?Roche
- “Ethics and HIV Prevention Research: An Analysis of the Early Tenofovir Prep Trial in Nigeria” by Kristin Peterson and Morenike O. Folayan
- “Is Infertility a Disease and Does It Matter?” by Hane Htut Maung
- “A Conception of Genetic Parenthood” by Thomas Douglas and Katrien Devolder
- “In Vitro Gametogenesis: The End of Egg Donation?” by Sarah Carter?Walshaw
- “In Vitro Gametogenesis and Reproductive Cloning: Can We Allow One While Banning the Other?” by Seppe Segers et al.
- “Ectogenesis and the Case against the Right to the Death of the Foetus” by Bruce P. Blackshaw and Daniel Rodger
- “Parents’ Posthumous Use of Daughter’s Ovarian Tissue: Ethical Dimensions” by Aliya O. Affdal and Vardit Ravitsky
- “A Burden from Birth? Non?Invasive Prenatal Testing and the Stigmatization of People with Disabilities” by Giovanni Rubeis and Florian Steger
- “Designing Humans: A Human Rights Approach” by S. Matthew Liao
- “Should Human Germ Line Editing Be Allowed? Some Suggestions on the Basis of the Existing Regulatory Framework” by Iñigo de Miguel Beriain
- “Compulsory Moral Bioenhancement Should Be Covert” by Parker Crutchfield
- “Transcranial Electrical Stimulation for Human Enhancement and the Risk of Inequality: Prohibition or Compensation?” by Andrea Lavazza
- “Self?Admission in Psychiatry: The Ethics” by Mattias Strand and Manne Sjöstrand
- “On the Reconceptualization of Alzheimer’s Disease” by Maartje H. N. Schermer and Edo Richard
- “No Conscientious Objection without Normative Justification: Against Conscientious Objection in Medicine” by Benjamin Zolf
- “Conscientious Objection in Healthcare: How Much Discretionary Space Best Supports Good Medicine?” by Doug McConnell
- “Mechanistic Reasoning and Informed Consent” by Ashley Kennedy andSarah Malanowski
- “Informed Consent and Nudging” by William Simkulet
- “The Epistemic and Ethical Onus of ‘One Health’” by Jonathan Beever and Nicolae Morar
- “Suffering at the End of Life” by Jukka Varelius
- “Accepting the Avoidable Death: The Philosophy of Limiting Intensive Care” by Marc Sørensen and Lars Willy Andersen
- “Institutional Non-Participation in Assisted Dying: Changing the Conversation” by Philip Shadd and Joshua Shadd