Musical Swine Flu!

This does exactly what it says on the tin.  Stephan Zielinski has set swine flu to music: The algorithm I used is a bit complicated, but just in case you’re curious: since the gene is expressed as a surface protein antibodies can sense, it’s considered as a string of amino acids.  Each beat corresponds to […]

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Obligatory Topical Swine Flu Post

The appearance of Swine Flu over the past couple of days is the sort of thing that provides ample food for thought among ethicists, particularly public health ethicists.  One perennial question, for example, concerns exactly what governments ought to do to protect their populations from infection – is spending on flu vaccines a good way […]

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In ur genez, clozin’ ur futurz

We all know the “open future” argument against genetic modification of humans: that it’s part of being a human that we are apparently in control of our own lives and that a parent who tried to impose a “model” on us would thereby wrong us.  I’ve never been sure, in all honesty, whether this tells […]

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consultation on medical profiling and online medicine: the ethics of ‘personalised’ health care in a consumer age

I thought this call for input would be of interest to some of our readers. The Nuffield Council on Bioethics is holding a public consultation on the ethical issues raised by online healthcare, telemedicine and commercial medical profiling technologies such as DNA testing and body imaging. These technologies and services are increasingly focused on the […]

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Post Mortems by MRI?

The BBC is reporting that families may be able to request that post-mortems be carried out by MRI rather than invasively under new proposals.  The qualification here is that [c]oroners [would] make the decision on a case-by-case basis as MRI scans may not always be the appropriate means to determining a cause of death, the […]

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