Who is Afraid of the Big BroadBioethics? A Dialogue Between Authors of “Highlights in Bioethics Through 40 Years”

Guest Post: Pingyue Jin and Mark Hakkarinen Article: Highlights in bioethics through 40 years: a quantitative analysis of top-cited journal articles Dear readers of the JME’s blog, we hope this short dialogue below may prompt your interest to join us in this journey that explores the depth and width of the field of bioethics. Everything starts […]

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Mind the Gap: Ethical Failures in the Treatment of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Guest Post: Charlotte Blease & Keith Geraghty Article: Epistemic injustice in healthcare encounters: Evidence from chronic fatigue syndrome by Blease, Carel, & Geraghty Some illnesses are uncool. That might sound like an inflammatory comment – especially for a medical journal, yet perhaps the biggest concealed fact in medicine is that hierarchies of diseases exist among […]

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The Moral Agency of Institutions: Effectively Using Expert Nurses to Support Patient Autonomy

Guest Post: Sonya Charles Article: The Moral Agency of Institutions: Effectively Using Nurses to Support Patient Autonomy When you think of nurses, what do you think of? Florence Nightingale? Nurse Ratchet? A sassy, but competent woman in scrubs? Popular culture has not always been kind to nurses and, even when it has, it rarely gives […]

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Are Single Men in the UK Entitled to have a Baby using Fertility Treatment?

Guest post by Atina Krajewska, Rachel Cahill-O’Callaghan, and Melanie Fellowes The World Health Organisation is currently considering a change in the definition of infertility according to which, it has been reported, “single men and women without medical issues [would] be classed as ‘infertile’, if they do not have children but want to become a parent.”  Although […]

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Randomised Placebo-Controlled Trials of Surgery: Ethical Analysis and Guidelines

Guest Post by Karolina Wartolowska Re: Randomised placebo-controlled trials of surgery: ethical analysis and guidelines [open access] Surgical placebo-controlled randomised controlled trials are, in many ways, like placebo-controlled drug trials. Like in case of drug trials, sometimes, a placebo-controlled design is necessary so that the results are valid and unbiased. Placebo control is usually necessary when a […]

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Victims, Vectors and Villains? Are Those Who Opt Out of Vaccination Morally Responsible for the Deaths of Others?

Guest Post by Euzebiusz Jamrozik, Toby Handfield, Michael J Selgelid Re: Victims, vectors and villains: are those who opt out of vaccination morally responsible for the deaths of others? Who is responsible for the harms caused by an outbreak for vaccine preventable disease? Are those who opt out of vaccination and transmit disease responsible for the resultant harms […]

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Amoral Enhancement

Guest Post by Saskia Verkiel Re: Amoral Enhancement A reply to Douglas’ reply to Harris’ reply to Douglas regarding the issue of freedom in cases of biomedical moral enhancement Wouldn’t it be awesome if we could just swallow a pill and become better people? With many aspects of life, growing numbers of people are embracing biomedical […]

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